Clearview AI accepts database usage restrictions to settle lawsuit

clearview AI facial recognition porn
Image credit: metamorworks | Shutterstock.com

(Reuters) – The facial recognition startup Clearview AI agreed to restrictions on how businesses can use its database of billions of facial images, to resolve a lawsuit accusing it of collecting people’s photos without permission.

Under a settlement filed on Monday in an Illinois state court in Chicago, Clearview AI will stop granting paid or free access to its database to most private businesses and individuals.

It also agreed to stop providing its database to government agencies in Illinois, including police and other law enforcement, for five years.

Clearview AI, based in New York, can still work with federal government agencies, including immigration authorities, as well as state government agencies outside Illinois.

The case had been brought in May 2020 by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), groups representing undocumented immigrants and victims of sexual and domestic violence, and others.

They accused Clearview AI of repeatedly violating the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act by scraping photos taken from the internet, including from platforms such as Microsoft’s LinkedIn and Facebook’s Instagram.

Facebook, part of Meta Platforms, agreed in 2021 to pay $650 million to settle class-action litigation accusing it of violating the Illinois law.

Critics of Clearview AI have said its technology violated people’s privacy, while the company has said blocking it from using publicly-available images amounted to censorship.

Monday’s settlement requires court approval. Clearview AI did not admit liability, negligence or fault in agreeing to settle.

Both sides characterized the settlement as a big win.

Floyd Abrams, one of Clearview AI’s lawyers and among the most prominent First Amendment lawyers, in a statement said the accord does not require material changes to the company’s business model or bar conduct it now engages in.

Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of the ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology Project, in a statement said the settlement “demonstrates that strong privacy laws can provide real protections against abuse.”

(By Jonathan Stempel; Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by Sara Merken; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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