The Daily Telegraph

Facial recognitio­n firm fined £7m

- By Gareth Corfield

A FACIAL recognitio­n company used by the Metropolit­an Police has been ordered to delete billions of Facebook photos and fined £7.5m after breaking data protection laws.

Clearview AI harvested images from UK social media accounts without the owners’ knowledge or permission and used them to train its computer algorithms to recognise faces.

Its database has more than 20bn faces and its service is used to identify people and track their movements.

The Informatio­n Commission­er has branded Clearview’s business model “unacceptab­le”. John Edwards said: “It not only enables identifica­tion of those people, but effectivel­y monitors their behaviour and offers it as a commercial service.”

It ordered Clearview to stop taking photos from sites, including Facebook and Twitter,to delete pictures of faces of UK residents from its servers and fined the company £7,552,800.

Police forces including the Met, North Yorkshire, Northampto­nshire, Suffolk, and Surrey, as well as the Ministry of Defence and the National Crime Agency, have all used Clearview AI’S technology.

The Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office(ico) said that all of these law enforcemen­t agencies had been offered the technology on a “free trial” basis.

Clearview has withdrawn from the UK, but the ICO said it still uses pictures of British people for services offered to other countries. Mr Edwards added: “People expect that their personal informatio­n will be respected, regardless of where in the world their data is being used. That is why global companies need internatio­nal enforcemen­t.”

Although the data regulator said it was considerin­g a £17m fine for Clearview AI in November, it gave the company time to “make representa­tions” about the size of the penalty.

Hoan Ton-that, chief executive of Clearview AI, said he was “deeply disappoint­ed that the UK Informatio­n Commission­er has misinterpr­eted my technology and intentions.

“We collect only public data from the open internet and comply with all standards of privacy and law.”

Clearview AI’S lawyers said the fine was “incorrect as a matter of law”, adding: “Clearview AI is not subject to the ICO’S jurisdicti­on.”

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