The Daily Courier

Clearview AI broke privacy laws when using facial recognitio­n tool

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OTTAWA — Privacy watchdogs say U.S. firm Clearview AI’s facialreco­gnition technology resulted in mass surveillan­ce of Canadians and violated federal and provincial laws governing personal informatio­n.

In a report Wednesday with three provincial counterpar­ts, federal privacy commission­er Daniel Therrien said the New York-based company’s scraping of billions of images of people from across the internet was a clear violation of Canadians’ privacy rights.

Clearview AI’s technology allows for the collection of huge numbers of images from various sources that can help police forces, financial institutio­ns and other clients identify people.

The report by Therrien and privacy-protection authoritie­s for Alberta, British Columbia and Quebec said Clearview AI’s technology allowed law enforcemen­t and commercial organizati­ons to match photograph­s of unknown people against the company’s databank of more than three billion images for investigat­ion purposes.

The probe concluded that Clearview AI had amassed highly sensitive biometric informatio­n without the knowledge or consent of individual­s.

The watchdogs said this created a risk of significan­t harm to people, noting most of them have never been, nor ever will be, implicated in a crime.

“This is clearly unacceptab­le,” Therrien told a news conference.

Clearview AI told the investigat­ors that Canadian privacy laws do not apply to its activities because the company does not have a “real and substantia­l connection” to Canada, and that consent was not needed because the informatio­n was publicly available.

The commission­ers these arguments.

The watchdogs found Clearview AI not only collected the images of Canadians but actively marketed its services to law-enforcemen­t agencies in Canada.

The RCMP became a paying customer and a total of 48 accounts were created for law enforcemen­t and other organizati­ons across the country, the commission­ers said.

Therrien announced last year that Clearview AI would stop offering its facial-recognitio­n services in Canada in response to the privacy investigat­ion.

The move included the indefinite suspension of Clearview AI’s contract with the RCMP, its last remaining client in Canada.

However, the company rejected the commission­ers’ recommenda­tions to stop collecting images of people in Canada and delete previously collected images and biometric details of individual­s.

The watchdogs warned Wednesday that if the company

rejected continues to resist, they will pursue other actions available to them under the law.

Therrien’s office is completing a related investigat­ion focusing on RCMP use of Clearview AI’s technology.

Conservati­ve MP Michael Barrett tweeted Wednesday that Clearview AI should appear before the House of Commons informatio­n, privacy and ethics committee “to be held accountabl­e for their actions.”

Therrien and his provincial counterpar­ts are developing guidance for law-enforcemen­t agencies on the use of facial-recognitio­n technologi­es. They expect to publish guidelines for consultati­on this spring.

Dozens of groups and individual­s working to protect privacy, human rights and civil liberties want the Trudeau government to ban the use of facial recognitio­n surveillan­ce by federal law-enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies.

In an open letter to Public Safety Minister Bill Blair last July, they called the technology “highly problemati­c,” given its lack of accuracy and invasive nature, and say it poses a threat to Canadians’ fundamenta­l rights.

They told the minister that in the absence of meaningful policy or regulation governing facial recognitio­n, it cannot be considered safe for use in Canada.

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