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EU privacy groups set sights on facial recognition firm

Privacy organisations complained to regulators in five European countries over the practices of Clearview AI, that has built a powerful facial recognition.

Amazon to extend ban on police use of face recognition tech
Facial recognition technology use by law enforcement has been criticized by activists who say its inaccuracies may reinforce racial bias - © AFP MAHMUD HAMS
Facial recognition technology use by law enforcement has been criticized by activists who say its inaccuracies may reinforce racial bias - © AFP MAHMUD HAMS

Privacy organisations on Thursday complained to regulators in five European countries over the practices of Clearview AI, a company that has built a powerful facial recognition database using images “scraped” from the web.

Clearview’s use of images — including those from people’s social media accounts — to offer biometrics services to private companies and law enforcement “goes far beyond what we could ever expect as online users”, Ioannis Kouvakas, legal officer at Privacy International, said in a statement.

While Clearview touts its technology’s ability to help law enforcement, its critics say facial recognition is open to abuse and could ultimately eliminate anonymity in public spaces — pointing to cases like China’s massive public surveillance system.

Facial recognition has also been attacked for failing to distinguish non-white people’s faces and women as well as it can identify white, male images — potentially leading to false positives.

Alongside three other digital rights organisations, PI has filed complaints with data regulators in France, Austria, Italy, Greece and Britain.

“We expect them to join forces in ruling that Clearview’s practices have no place in Europe, which would have meaningful ramifications for the company’s operations globally,” PI said.

In February, Canada’s privacy commissioner found that the firm’s activity “is mass surveillance and it is illegal” under the country’s privacy laws.

And British and Australian privacy watchdogs last year launched a joint probe of their own.

“Just because something is ‘online’ does not mean it is fair game to be appropriated by others in any which way they want to — neither morally nor legally,” said Alan Dahi, a data protection lawyer at Austrian privacy group Noyb.

Clearview came to public prominence in a January 2020 New York Times report that detailed how it was already working with law enforcement, including the US FBI and Department of Homeland Security.

On its website, it boasts the “largest known database of 3+ billion facial images sourced from public-only web sources, including news media, mugshot websites, public social media, and many other open sources”.

Founder Hoan Ton-That acknowledged to the NYT at the time that Clearview was breaching the terms of service of Facebook and other social media sites by gathering users’ photos.

Facebook, Twitter, YouTube (Google) and LinkedIn (Microsoft) have all protested against Clearview’s practices.

And last year, tech firms including Microsoft and Amazon suspended sales of facial recognition software to police forces when confronted with 2020’s Black Lives Matter movement.

Amazon last week extended the original one-year moratorium “until further notice”.

But “tools for conducting facial recognition are widely available” even outside the big tech companies, according to journalist Nicolas Kayser-Bril, who complied a report on the technology for advocacy group AlgorithmWatch last year that found at least 10 European police forces using it.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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