California Courts Continue to Cool on CIPA Allegations
As we have blogged about in the past, federal district courts have seen a tidal wave of putative class actions by website users claiming violations of the California Invasion of Privacy Act (CIPA), Cal. Penal Code § 630, et seq. These lawsuits focus on the alleged unlawful use of website tracking technologies, such as cookies, pixels, tags, and beacons, to collect and use personal information of people who visit these websites without their consent. The deluge of lawsuits has prompted courts to scrutinize CIPA claims more rigorously. As a recent example, in Smith v. Yeti Coolers, LLC, the Northern District of California dismissed with prejudice a putative class action challenging Yeti’s use of technology supplied by third-party payment processor, Adyen, to process customer purchases on its website. The lawsuit claimed that Adyen incorporated Yeti customers’ financial information into its fraud-prevention system, which it then marketed to merchants without customers’ consent. The plaintiff brought claims for violations of CIPA § 631 (anti-wiretapping) and § 632 (anti-eavesdropping) and for invasion of privacy under California’s Constitution. The court initially dismissed the complaint without prejudice because it did not “‘sufficiently allege [Yeti’s] knowledge of Adyen’s allegedly wrongful conduct or Defendant’s intent to assist Adyen in that conduct.’” The plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint (SAC) fared no better. First, the court...