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Published: September 22, 2009
NEW YORK - Facebook is closing an uncomfortable chapter in its 5-year history.
The social network says it will shut down Beacon, a program that tracks users' activities on other Web sites. When it launched in 2007, Beacon was immediately attacked by users as a privacy violation.
It tracked purchases Facebook users made on other sites and sent alerts about them to their Facebook friends. Facebook later let users turn Beacon off, and CEO Mark Zuckerberg publicly apologized for it.
Beacon never caught on, and Facebook agreed to end it as part of a class-action lawsuit settlement.
The Palo Alto, Calif.-based company will pay $9.5 million to create a foundation to promote online privacy, safety and security.
The proposed settlement still must be approved by a judge.
The Associated Press
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