Cops’ favorite face image search engine fined $33M for privacy violation
Enlarge (credit: EyeEm Mobile GmbH | iStock / Getty Images Plus)
A controversial facial recognition tech company behind a vast face image search engine widely used by cops has been fined approximately $33 million in the Netherlands for serious data privacy violations.
According to the Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA), Clearview AI "built an illegal database with billions of photos of faces" by crawling the web and without gaining consent, including from people in the Netherlands.
Clearview AI's technology-which has been banned in some US cities over concerns that it gives law enforcement unlimited power to track people in their daily lives-works by pulling in more than 40 billion face images from the web without setting "any limitations in terms of geographical location or nationality," the Dutch DPA found. Perhaps most concerning, the Dutch DPA said, Clearview AI also provides "facial recognition software for identifying children," therefore indiscriminately processing personal data of minors.