National Post

Clearview AI broke Canadian privacy laws, watchdogs say

Surveillan­ce through facial recognitio­n tool

- Jim Bronskill

OTTAWA • Privacy watchdogs say u.s. firm Clearview AI’S facial-recognitio­n 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 yorkbased 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 rejected 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 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.

The company says it aims to help law-enforcemen­t agencies solve the toughest cases, and its technology comes with strict guidelines and safeguards to ensure investigat­ors use it only for its intended purpose.

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.

Public Safety Minister bill blair lauded Therrien’s efforts and said the government would “continue to work with him” to ensure Canadians’ privacy is respected.

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 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.

Openmedia, which works to keep the internet surveillan­ce-free, said Wednesday it should never have been possible for police to adopt Clearview AI’S facial recognitio­n tool.

“essentiall­y, Clearview AI makes everyone a suspect every time the police use it,” said Openmedia’s bryan Short.

A Quebec photograph­er wants a judge to order the RCMP to destroy all the images of Canadians it obtained through the tool. ha Vi doan’s proposed classactio­n lawsuit in Federal Court seeks damages for her and other Canadians whose photos and related informatio­n were allegedly part of the massive database compiled by Clearview AI. her lawyer, Lev Alexeev, said the commission­ers’ report confirms that Clearview AI “engaged in illegal mass surveillan­ce.”

 ?? ADRIAN Wyld / The CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien and his provincial counterpar­ts are developing guidance for law-enforcemen­t agencies on the use of facial-recognitio­n technologi­es.
ADRIAN Wyld / The CANADIAN PRESS FILES Privacy Commission­er Daniel Therrien and his provincial counterpar­ts are developing guidance for law-enforcemen­t agencies on the use of facial-recognitio­n technologi­es.

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