A member of the UK parliament who recently ordered the seizure of a cache of internal Facebook documents has shown no signs of backing down.
Meanwhile, a California county judge is irked that documents that he ordered kept secret under a protective order have now been shared abroad.
The years-long legal dispute between Facebook and the tiny app company Six4Three has now intersected with an ongoing British investigation into Facebook’s privacy practices—resulting in a strange twist.
A new Monday court filing indicates that Six4Three’s managing director, Ted Kramer, met with MP Damian Collins in the parliamentarian’s London office on November 20. According to the filing, MP Collins told Kramer that he was in contempt of Parliament. There, Kramer “panicked” and began frantically searching his Dropbox account for relevant files obtained under civil discovery. He eventually copied some of them to a USB stick, which he gave to Collins.
“He did not open any of the files,” the Monday document states. “Mr. Kramer has not reviewed any documents designated highly confidential by Facebook at any time and was aware that his decision to turn over the documents to Mr. Collins went against the explicit statements by counsel in the above referenced communications.”
Collins is the chair of Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport (DCMS) Committee in the UK Parliament, which has been overseeing inquiries into Facebook’s practices. On November 16, the DCMS again asked Zuckerberg to appear before the committee via video. He has given no indication that he will do so.


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