Max Schrems expressing his thoughts regarding the matter in a video;

First little video summary on the AG at the #CJEU on the Facebook “class action”.. 😉 pic.twitter.com/7a8e5ssrTP — Max Schrems (@maxschrems) November 14, 2017



The privacy campaigner, Max Schrems has been fighting against the giant social media platform since 2011. However, recently he is entitled by the Europe’s highest court Advocate General, as the one to sue Facebook Ireland through the Austrian courts, reports Irish Independent.

The case was filed on his disclosures about the website’s private data collection procedure. According to Schrems, Facebook exceeds the private data collection limit as determined by the EU law. He also claimed that the site is involved in providing the data access to the US intelligence.

https://twitter.com/maxschrems/status/930378883236589568

The case is currently being heard in Dublin, where the social media company has its European headquarters. However, Max Schrems being annoyed with the progress pace of Irish legal system has taken a successive case to his home country, Austria.

The accused firm, Facebook has voiced up against the case to the point that the jurisdiction shouldn’t have heard the case.

“A consumer, who is entitled to sue his foreign contact partner in his own place of domicile, cannot involve, at the same time as his own claims, claims on the same subject assigned by other consumers,” said Michal Bobek, The European Court of Justice’s Advocate General.

He has written these statements in his released non-binding opinion. Further, he expressed that the court must reflect Schrems opinion but not to follow them and the case would just be undertaken as his personal opinion. Also, his entitlement could not bring a legal action against the social media giant.

Some serious assumptions are being evolved after the case saying that it could have extreme consequences for US and EU trade relations.

Now it depends on European reaction to the American mass surveillance and how they take it. Other sides, transfers such as credit card payments among countries are the details on which most companies rely, no matter what the size.