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Zuckerberg’s Copycat Facebook Fined Sh450 Million, Here’s Why

Earlier today, Reuters reported that a milan-based court ordered Facebook to pay $4.70 million in damages to an Italian software development company for copyright infringement.

Facebook
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (Image/gettyimages)

The judges said the U.S. group copied their ‘Nearby’ feature from Italy’s Business Competence’s app ‘Faround’, which allows users to identify shops, clubs, restaurants in their surrounding area through geolocalisation.

The court’s decision upheld a 2019 ruling but increased the amount of damages that Facebook will have to pay, initially set at 350,000 euros.

We have received the court’s decision and are examining it carefully,” a Facebook spokesman told Reuters.

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Nearby, a feature that Facebook book stole from Faround.

Business Competence filed a lawsuit in 2013, accusing Facebook’s ‘Nearby’ feature of having copied its Faround application, which helps users locate Facebook friends in the vicinity.

A copy of the court’s ruling said that Facebook launched its Nearby feature only months after Faround was included in the social network’s app store in 2012.

The complaint alleged that the two applications were extremely similar in their functions and general set-up.

Faround
Faround, an app that Facebook cloned to launch Nearby

Faround app was launched in September 2012 and quickly gained popularity among Italian users.

Faround was the most downloaded new social networking app in the country during the week of Nov. 22, 2012, according to data from App Annie, a business that measures online traffic.

Downloads plunged the month after Facebook launched its own Nearby feature on Dec. 17 of that year.

“It was a big blow to us to see that we were losing everything we had invested (into Faround),” Business Competence Chief Executive Sara Colnago told Reuters, adding that it had cost the company 500,000 euros ($530,050) to develop the app.