Microsoft's LinkedIn settles advertisers' lawsuit over alleged overcharges

LinkedIn agreed to pay $6.625 million (S$8.90 million) to settle a proposed class action accusing the Microsoft unit of overcharging advertisers by inflating how many people watched video ads on its platform. A preliminary settlement was filed late on Thursday in San Jose, California federal court, and requires approval by US Magistrate Judge Susan van Keulen in San Jose, California. LinkedIn denied wrongdoing. It also agreed to use reasonable efforts for two years to hire an outside auditor to review its ad metrics. Advertisers led by TopDevz of Sacramento, California and Noirefy of Chicago accused LinkedIn of inflating ad metrics by counting video ad "views" from users' LinkedIn apps, even when videos played only off-screen because users scrolled past them. The lawsuit began two weeks after LinkedIn disclosed in November 2020, that its engineers fixed software bugs on the business-focused social media platform that may have led to more than 418,000 overcharges, most under $25. LinkedIn provided credits to nearly all affected advertisers.

Microsoft's LinkedIn settles advertisers' lawsuit over alleged overcharges

Microsoft's LinkedIn settles advertisers' lawsuit over alleged overcharges

Microsoft's LinkedIn settles advertisers' lawsuit over alleged overcharges

Microsoft's LinkedIn settles advertisers' lawsuit over alleged overcharges
Microsoft's LinkedIn settles advertisers' lawsuit over alleged overcharges
Ads Links by Easy Branches
เล่นเกมออนไลน์ฟรีที่ games.easybranches.com

บริการโพสต์ thainews.easybranches.com/contribute