Texarkana Gazette

Texas sues over Facebook’s dropped facial-recognitio­n tech

- By Laurel Brubaker Calkins

Facebook claims it no longer collects and profits off users’ faces through controvers­ial facial-recognitio­n technology. Texas isn’t buying it.

The state sued Meta Platforms Inc. over claims its Facebook and Instagram platforms are still monetizing people’s faces without their consent, as well as holding onto a facial-geometry database compiled over a decade. Wielding multiple laws that allow for penalties of $25,000 per violation, the state is seeking billions of dollars in its complaint filed Monday.

“These claims are without merit and we will defend ourselves vigorously,” Meta said in a statement.

Facebook announced last year it would stop using facial-recognitio­n technology and delete its database of users’ facial profiles after privacy advocates mounted a push-back campaign. That came after the company agreed to pay $650 million in 2020 in the largest-ever U.S. consumer privacy settlement, resolving a class-action suit by disgruntle­d Facebook users in Illinois who didn’t give permission for the company’s data-tagging tool to harvest biometric identifier­s from their photos and videos.

Read More: Millions of Facebook Users Pass on $650 Million Privacy Jackpot

Shortly after the settlement, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton kicked off his own investigat­ion into the company’s facial-recognitio­n technology, in what critics called a naked play at shaking Facebook down again. Little was heard from

Texas’s investigat­ion in the intervenin­g year and a half, until Monday.

Paxton staged a press conference to announce the suit against Meta on the first day of early voting in the Texas primaries. Paxton is hip deep in a fierce re-election battle against well-financed Republican primary rivals, while simultaneo­usly fending off a federal corruption probe into improper use of his office. The Meta complaint was filed in state court in Marshall, the home district of one of his toughest political opponents.

The embattled attorney general is also awaiting a civil trial on long-stalled allegation­s he violated state securities laws. Paxton, who has been endorsed by former President Donald Trump, has carved out a niche attacking Big Tech giants like Google, Twitter and Facebook as well as the Biden administra­tion’s

immigratio­n and vaccinatio­n policies.

In the new lawsuit, Texas claims Facebook hasn’t said it deleted biometric identifier­s collected from photos and videos uploaded by family and friends of non-Facebook users, or whether facial-recognitio­n technology is still being used at Meta’s Instagram, WhatsApp, Facebook Reality Labs “or its upcoming virtual-reality universe,” according to the complaint.

Meta said on its blog in November that it was deleting face print records for more than 1 billion people. The company said one third of its users had given their consent to use the technology.

“We need to weigh the positive use cases for facial recognitio­n against growing societal concerns, especially as regulators have yet to provide clear rules,” the post said.

The company also said that it wasn’t giving up on the technology.

“Looking ahead, we still see facial recognitio­n technology as a powerful tool, for example, for people needing to verify their identity, or to prevent fraud and impersonat­ion,” according to the post.

At Paxton’s press conference and in the lawsuit, he said he’s not letting Meta off the hook.

Facebook has created the largest facial dataset in the world with its DeepFace algorithm, a deep learning facial-recognitio­n system that “approaches human-level accuracy in identifyin­g faces,” the state attorney general said in the complaint. “And it exists only because — for over a decade — Facebook illegally and surreptiti­ously captured the biometric identifier­s of tens of millions of Facebook and Instagram users and non-users.”

If Texas’s claims hold up, Meta could be looking at stiff fines.

Paxton claims Meta’s gathering and commercial­ization of biometric identifier­s without consent violates the Texas Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier Act, or CUBI, as well as three other state privacy statutes concerning the use of biometric identifier­s. Three of the laws carry penalties up to $25,000 per violation, while the fourth penalizes violators at up to $10,000 per occurrence, which Texas claims happened “billions of times.”

It’s not clear that CUBI, which was enacted in 2009 and can only be enforced by the Texas attorney general’s office, has ever been used against a company.

“There can be no free pass for Facebook unlawfully invading the privacy rights of tens of millions of Texas residents by misappropr­iating their data and putting one of their most personal and valuable possession­s — records of their facial geometry — at risk from hackers and bad actors, all to build an AI-powered virtual-reality empire,” Paxton said in the complaint.

The case is State of Texas v Meta Platforms Inc. f/k/a/ Facebook Inc., 71st Judicial District Court in Harrison County, Texas (Marshall). ———

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