New York Post

‘Spyware’ firm faces fed lawsuit

- By DEAN BALSAMINI

It’s time for controvers­ial facial-recognitio­n software company Clearview AI to face its accusers.

The Manhattan-based firm’s program “infringes the privacy and civil liberties of nearly everyone in the United States,” a 31-page class-action lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court charges.

Manhattani­te Dean John is among those who have signed on to the suit, which demands Clearview stop “illegally” harvesting people’s photos from social media — and pay up more than $5 million in damages.

The suit alleges Clearview “covertly collected billions of personal photograph­s from across the Internet, extracted [personal] informatio­n from them, and aggregated that data into a massive surveillan­ce database that can identify hundreds of millions of Americans in seconds with just a picture.”

The complaint charges Clearview AI “created this dystopian dragnet without ever obtaining permission from the subjects of the images or the websites on which they were hosted.”

With clever marketing to individual police officers, the lawsuit contends that “the company soon exploded and was openly used by thousands of law enforcemen­t agencies throughout the country, and quietly used by private industry and the well-connected.”

Gristedes supermarke­ts billionair­e John Catsimatid­is reportedly used the software to spy on his jet-setting daughter’s date at Cipriani in SoHo.

In January, The Post reported that rogue NYPD officers were using Clearview AI software on their personal phones.

“This company’s practices are catastroph­ically reckless, and pose one of the gravest threats to privacy imaginable,” American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Nathan Freed Wessler, who is not involved in the litigation, told The Post. “Police should stay far away from Clearview’s insidious system.”

Clearview attorney Tor Ekeland said the company “is a public search engine that uses only publicly available images accessible to anyone with a smart phone or computer. It’s unfortunat­e the ACLU wants to censor what search engines people can use.”

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