When you use FaceApp, you give a Russian company "perpetual, irrevocable" rights to your photos
FaceApp is a wildly popular smartphone app that alters people's faces with various filters. Its most popular filter is one that ages the person in the photo. It turns out when you upload your photos to FaceApp, the Russian company that made the app gets a perpetual license to your photos. In other words, your photo could end up on a billboard or online advertisement for any imaginable product or service and you can't do anything about it.
From Fox 29:
Small business lawyer Elizabeth Potts Weinstein tweeted out the "User Content" section of FaceApp's terms, saying "if you use #FaceApp you are giving them a license to use your photos, your name, your username and your likeness for any purpose including commercial purposes (like on a billboard or internet ad)."
"You grant FaceApp a perpetual, irrevocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide, fully-paid, transferable sub-licensable license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate... distribute, publicly perform and display your User Content," the FaceApp terms read.
If you use #FaceApp you are giving them a license to use your photos, your name, your username, and your likeness for any purpose including commercial purposes (like on a billboard or internet ad) -- see their Terms: https://t.co/e0sTgzowoN pic.twitter.com/XzYxRdXZ9q
- Elizabeth Potts Weinstein (@ElizabethPW) July 17, 2019
(Image: Adam J. Manley, CC-BY,
modified (cropping))