Jennifer L. Henn  |  December 24, 2020

Category: Legal News

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Ancestry faces class action lawsuit.

The popular genealogy website and service Ancestry has been hit with another class action lawsuit over claims the company collects and then sells access to personal data, records and yearbook photos without people’s permission.

According to the class action lawsuit, filed in federal court in Illinois on Dec. 14, Ancestry has violated the rights of millions of Illinois residents through its practices. Lawyers for the plaintiff say the company has amassed a database of information from school yearbooks from 1900 to 1999 that contains some 730 records, and profits by selling subscriptions to tap into that information.

At no point has Ancestry sought or received permission from the people who appear in those yearbooks, though, the class action lawsuit claims.

Sergio Bonilla of Great Lakes, Illinois, is one of those people.

He is the lead plaintiff in the new case and is seeking the Court’s permission to represent a Class of others from Illinois whose yearbooks photos and information have been extracted and monetized by Ancestry.

According to its website, Ancestry’s yearbook database includes more than 47 million records, including photographs, from Illinois grade schools and universities.

Bonilla and his legal team allege Ancestry.com Operations Inc. has violated Illinois state privacy laws and has committed intrusion upon seclusion and become unjustly enriched.

Ancestry faces class action lawsuit.“In exchange for subscription payments ranging from $24.99 to $49.99 per month … Ancestry subscribers receive the ability to search, view, and download records in Ancestry databases,” Bonilla’s class action lawsuit says. “Ancestry did not ask the consent of the people whose personal information and photographs it profits from. Nor has it offered them any compensation for [their] ongoing use.”

A search of the Ancestry yearbook database turned up information about where Bonilla went to high school, his estimated birth year and at least one photograph of him.

“Mr. Bonilla’s face is plainly visible, as are the faces of the four other boys in the photograph, all of whom are aged between nine and 12 years old at the time of the photograph,” the class action lawsuit says.

The photograph and data are available to paid subscribers to Ancestry and to those participating in the company’s promotional 14-day free trial subscription, according to the complaint.

Bonilla’s class action lawsuit is at least the second of its kind to be leveled against Ancestry recently.

In late November, Meredith Callahan and Lawrence Abraham filed a similar class action lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. Both lead plaintiffs say they do not subscribe to Ancestry, nor did they give their permission for their yearbook photos and information to appear in the company’s searchable database; however, they discovered their photos and information are included in it.

Have your yearbooks photos been collected and added to the Ancestry yearbook database without your consent? Tell us about it in the comment section below.

Lead plaintiff Bonilla and the proposed Class Members are represented by Shannon M. McNulty of Clifford Law Offices PC; Michael F. Ram and Marie N. Appel of Morgan & Morgan; and Benjamin R. Osborn.

The Ancestry Class Action Lawsuit is Sergio Bonilla, et al. v. Ancestry.com Operations Inc., et al., Case No. 1:20-cv-07390, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois Eastern Division.

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237 thoughts onClass Action Lawsuit Says Ancestry Shows Yearbook Photos Without Consent

  1. TERRI DAVIS says:

    Pleas add me

  2. Blair Farr says:

    Yes, my picture has been used. Please add me to the lawsuit.

  3. Kurt Geist says:

    Talk about exploitation of inquiring people who simply want more info about their genealogy. Add me please

  4. Curtis Hoag says:

    Add me please

    1. Kelly Dunlap Kosmas says:

      I’m very prevalent in all 4 of my HS yearbooks and all my pics are for the taking. I was shocked that they could do that. Specially since I was 17 when I graduated. Too much information without my consent for someone to use.

  5. Doug Mor says:

    Ancestry is a never ending money pit. They ask for you for info for your family tree and then use it to gather info that they charge you for. What a racket. They make errors and charge you for it

    1. Doug moe says:

      Cancel the last comment I made

      1. Sharon Busby says:

        Please add me.

  6. LISSETTE M CHAVEZ says:

    Please add me i seen my high school pic and I did not give permission.

  7. SYLVIA SAENZ says:

    Add me…I also was shown my high school photo

  8. Edward Collins says:

    add me

  9. LISA HAWKINS says:

    Please add me

  10. Kristin Kleinfelt says:

    Please add me. Thanks in advance.

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