Meta Platforms (META) CEO Mark Zuckerberg and several current and former company directors have reached a $190 million settlement to resolve a shareholder lawsuit alleging they dropped the ball on protecting Facebook users' privacy.
The settlement amount was disclosed Thursday in a Delaware Chancery Court filing after being kept under seal since a scheduled trial was called off in July. It's a substantial sum, though considerably less than the $8 billion shareholders originally demanded.
What the Lawsuit Alleged
This was a derivative case, meaning shareholders were suing on behalf of the company itself. The core claim? That Meta's leadership allowed widespread misuse of user data, which eventually triggered billions in regulatory penalties, including the infamous $5 billion fine connected to the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
Shareholders argued that executives essentially ignored their oversight duties while user data was being accessed and exploited without proper authorization. The failures were serious enough that this settlement ranks as the second-largest derivative settlement in Delaware history involving oversight lapses.
How the Money Gets Paid
The $190 million won't come directly from Zuckerberg's or the directors' personal bank accounts. Instead, it'll be covered by directors' and officers' insurance, which is pretty standard for these types of settlements.
The plaintiff attorneys are expected to request fees of up to 30% of the settlement amount, which would put their take at around $57 million.
Avoiding the Courtroom Drama
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of this settlement is what it prevents: a blockbuster trial that would have put some of Silicon Valley's biggest names under oath. Mark Zuckerberg, venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, former COO Sheryl Sandberg, and PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel were all scheduled to testify before the settlement was reached.
As part of the agreement, Meta's board has committed to strengthening various corporate governance policies, including those covering director conduct, insider trading rules, and whistleblower protections. Whether these changes represent meaningful reforms or just window dressing remains to be seen, but they're part of the package that got this case resolved without a trial.