Facial Recognition Industry Could Face a Reset
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The company not only enables the identification of those people but effectively monitors their behavior and offers it as a commercial service. That is unacceptable. That is why we have acted to protect people in the UK by fining the company and issuing an enforcement notice." One problem with facial recognition technology is that it often misidentifies minorities, John Bambenek, cybersecurity expert at Netenrich, a security and operations analytics SaaS company, told Lifewire via email. "The additional problem is that organizations, such as Facebook, for example, being an open-ecosystem, allow for the possibility that threat actors can poison the data with images to skew facial recognition," he added. "In the social media context, the risks are lesser, but as facial recognition is used for more important functions, the cost of errant recognition gets much higher."
Facial Recognition Industry Could Face a Reset
UK case may be a sign of things to come in the US
By Sascha Brodsky Sascha Brodsky Senior Tech Reporter Macalester College Columbia University Sascha Brodsky is a freelance journalist based in New York City. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, the Guardian, the Los Angeles Times and many other publications. lifewire's editorial guidelines Published on May 26, 2022 12:39PM EDT Fact checked by Jerri Ledford Fact checked by Jerri Ledford Western Kentucky University Gulf Coast Community College Jerri L. Ledford has been writing, editing, and fact-checking tech stories since 1994. Her work has appeared in Computerworld, PC Magazine, Information Today, and many others. lifewire's fact checking process Tweet Share Email Tweet Share Email Internet & Security Mobile Phones Internet & Security Computers & Tablets Smart Life Home Theater & Entertainment Software & Apps Social Media Streaming Gaming UK regulators have confirmed a penalty for Clearview AI, a controversial facial recognition company.A similar crackdown to the UK case has already started in the US, as this ruling comes two weeks after a lawsuit was settled out of court between Clearview and the ACLU. One problem with facial recognition technology is that it often misidentifies minorities. John M Lund Photography Inc / Getty Images The facial recognition software industry is meeting legislative roadblocks in its efforts to scrape your pictures from the internet, experts say. The UK's data protection watchdog has confirmed a penalty for Clearview AI, a controversial facial recognition company. The firm has collected images of people from the web and social media to create a global online database that police can use. "The practice of scraping people's images and identities without their consent and performing facial recognition based on that data is questionably legal, and a serious violation of public privacy," Avi Golan, the CEO of facial recognition company Oosto told Lifewire in an email interview. "Even used only by law enforcement agencies, this violates privacy and public confidence in the technology. The leakage of these capabilities into the private sector is a dangerous escalation." Clearview did not immediately respond to a request from Lifewire seeking comment.Placing Limits
In Britain, Clearview is getting the cold shoulder. The country's Information Commission's Office said the company had broken data protection laws. Clearview was ordered to delete data it has on UK residents and banned from collecting more information. "Clearview AI Inc has collected multiple images of people all over the world, including in the UK, from a variety of websites and social media platforms, creating a database with more than 20 billion images," John Edwards, the UK's information commissioner, said in the news release.The company not only enables the identification of those people but effectively monitors their behavior and offers it as a commercial service. That is unacceptable. That is why we have acted to protect people in the UK by fining the company and issuing an enforcement notice." One problem with facial recognition technology is that it often misidentifies minorities, John Bambenek, cybersecurity expert at Netenrich, a security and operations analytics SaaS company, told Lifewire via email. "The additional problem is that organizations, such as Facebook, for example, being an open-ecosystem, allow for the possibility that threat actors can poison the data with images to skew facial recognition," he added. "In the social media context, the risks are lesser, but as facial recognition is used for more important functions, the cost of errant recognition gets much higher."