The Future of Privacy is Clear
Michael Spencer
A.I. Writer, researcher and curator - full-time Newsletter publication manager.
I write about AI every day on AISupremacy, the fastest growing substack Newsletter about AI that you can sign up for free here. I hereby give Linkedin News expressed permission to copy my headline.
Surveillance Capitalism in an era of Covid-19, is the new normal. Work from home, now the Metaverse. Very good progress has been made by Silicon Valley in normalizing an Advertising centric digital everything society, dividing people and adding new tools to track and alter their online behavior, even their ideologies.
These apps also can cause us mental health harm and lead to a calculated weakening of our resistance to digital dopamine feedback loops (think TikTok). We are being trained for fundamentally more addictive in-app experiences and immersive environments.
Clearview AI is an American facial recognition company, providing software to companies, law enforcement, universities, and individuals. They scrapped most of our faces?from the internet, to train their facial recognition system and database.
Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube objected, but it still occurred.
Now it appears?Clearview AI is closer to getting a US patent for its facial recognition technology.?This is troubling in the ethics of AI because we already trust social platforms less for their disregard for our privacy, human rights and exploitation of our attention systems in their apps.
The company’s controversial technology fills its database with images it scrapes from social media.
We backlist companies like SenseTime, yet companies like Clearview proliferate in our own backyard. After?Clearview AI?scraped billions of photos from the public web — from websites including Instagram, Venmo and LinkedIn — to create a facial recognition tool for law enforcement authorities, many concerns were raised about the company and its norm-breaking tool.
The legal and regulatory mechanisms around the internet, AI and the metaverse are very much lacking, and it’s creating a winner-takes-all capitalism with illegal exploitations. It will result in a Metaverse that infringes on our human rights. That’s the new meta of our new normal it appears.
I cover and follow privacy related news related to artificial intelligence, though I rarely write about each case. However, I think this case is a bit significant.
Last week it was reported Clearview AI is on track to receive a US patent for its facial recognition technology, according to a report from?Politico.
Beyond the privacy implications and legality of what Clearview AI had done, there were questions about whether the tool worked as advertised: Could the company actually find one particular person’s face out of a database of billions? While China is ten years ahead of us in facial recognition, facial recognition will be ubiquitous by 2035 globally. BigTech has a history of selling this tech to the police. Police who have been abusing their positions of authority against racial minorities.
In an era where the U.S. is suffering a mental health crisis (partly caused by technology apps I might add), this is getting a bit serious. Facebook (now Meta) takes no responsibility for the spread of Covid-19 misinformation.
In December, 2021 Clearview has reportedly sent a “notice of allowance” by the US Patent and Trademark Office, which means that once it pays the required administration fees, its patent will be officially approved.
In the spirit of Surveillance Capitalism invented by companies like Google and Facebook, Clearview AI builds its facial recognition database using images of people that it scrapes across social media (and the internet in general), a practice that has the company steeped in controversy.
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So how does it work? Clearview’s?patent application?details its use of a “web crawler” to acquire images, even noting that “online photos associated with a person’s account may help to create additional records of facial recognition data points,” which its machine learning algorithm can then use to find and identify matches.
America is backlisting companies in China while it has startups that are on the same path. Alphabet and your mother are normalizing a brand of surveillance capitalism that will turn our cities into micro dystopias of data-streams. This is not great for your privacy or your human freedoms.
Critics argue that Clearview AI’s facial recognition technology is a violation of privacy and that it may negatively impact minority communities. If everything online is open-source, people are going to gradually behave quite differently online. An exodus from apps like Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn demonstrates that. Some people on LinkedIn now use avatars (cartoon faces) as their images.
Clearview AI’s tech also has significant biases to identity women and people of color. Male led technologies have a tendency to racially profile. Especially when one of your biggest clients is law enforcement.
According to the Verge, Clearview’s data is already being used by the Pentagon and DoD sector. Last year, the company said that its technology was?used by over 2,400 police agencies?—?including the FBI and Department of Homeland Security?— to identify suspects. In the aftermath of the Capitol riots this January,?Clearview AI said the use of its technology by law enforcement?sharply increased as detectives worked to identify those associated with the incident.
This suggests tech companies are working with Government and National Defense in a way some of the public may not be aware of. The U.S. has its own surveillance architecture it’s trying to put in place to compete with China.
According to the New York Times, Clearview AI’s app was in the hands of law enforcement agencies for years before its accuracy was tested by an impartial third party. Now, after two rounds of federal testing in October, 2021, the accuracy of the tool is no longer a prime concern.
The?American Civil Liberties Union sued the company?last year for violating the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, resulting in Clearview?stopping the sale of its technology to private companies?and non-law enforcement entities. In Australia it’s gotten much of the same. Yet American surveillance companies are not backing down. They now work as a unit to manipulate society together like we see with the Metaverse narrative.
So in late 2021 this amounts to the U.S. government moving?to award a lucrative patent for a “search engine for faces,”?a technology that has members of Congress and privacy advocates up in arms. Any picture you uploaded online is likely already in there. Maybe it wasn’t even you who uploaded it. BigTech has readily shared all of its data on you with its partners for years, without paying you anything.
Last year, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube all sent cease and desist letters demanding that the company stop scraping images and videos from the platforms, as the practice is in violation of each site’s policies. But this is mostly a PR tactic. They all violate our privacy and algorithmically seek to alter our online behavior to maximize ARPU. That’s average revenue per user.
As citizens they don’t have our consent and won’t need it. Clearview’s software — which scrapes public images from social media to help law enforcement match images in government databases or surveillance footage — has long faced fire from privacy advocates who say it uses people’s faces without their knowledge or consent.
The new normal is a Metaverse that will continue to infringe upon our human rights for profit. It's hard to be proud of the internet America has created.
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3 年In order to improve the quality of its facial recognition on dark skin, a Chinese tech company used the autocratic regime in Zimbabwe ... that wanted to track pro-democracy activists! A real win-win!
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3 年We already lost our privacy long time ago, it's a question of time now, on "how much more" will we accept to give away. We will not be capable to regulate AI until some kind of disaster happens - our history, of Man Kind, will keep the same - we did not change. Facebook and Google are doing that all the time and "we" do not care, right!? Social media if full of bots out there and most of us still think they are important right...We need to accept all this, and also believe that most of it will be for the good: medicine, health, productivity, new raw materials,...no one will be able to regulate AI.