What Happens When Our Faces Are Tracked Everywhere We Go? |
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=58730"><span class="small">Kashmir Hill, The New York Times</span></a> |
Friday, 19 March 2021 08:07 |
Hill writes: "When a secretive start-up scraped the internet to build a facial-recognition tool, it tested a legal and ethical limit - and blew the future of privacy in America wide open."
What Happens When Our Faces Are Tracked Everywhere We Go?19 March 21
When an investigator in New York saw the request, she ran the face through an unusual new facial-recognition app she had just started using, called Clearview AI. The team behind it had scraped the public web — social media, employment sites, YouTube, Venmo — to create a database with three billion images of people, along with links to the webpages from which the photos had come. This dwarfed the databases of other such products for law enforcement, which drew only on official photography like mug shots, driver’s licenses and passport pictures; with Clearview, it was effortless to go from a face to a Facebook account. The app turned up an odd hit: an Instagram photo of a heavily muscled Asian man and a female fitness model, posing on a red carpet at a bodybuilding expo in Las Vegas. The suspect was neither Asian nor a woman. But upon closer inspection, you could see a white man in the background, at the edge of the photo’s frame, standing behind the counter of a booth for a workout-supplements company. That was the match. On Instagram, his face would appear about half as big as your fingernail. The federal agent was astounded. |