A face recognition app used by thousands of law enforcement agencies, which has drawn considerable scrutiny in past weeks over its creator’s dubious data collection methods, contains code hinting at ...
Embattled face recognition startup Clearview AI is topping off a week of intense scrutiny over its nebulous law enforcement partnerships with an even bigger dose of bad news: Apple has reportedly ...
The developer has been misusing an Apple tool to distribute its controversial iOS app, which recognizes faces and associates them with billions of images scraped from the internet. Apple has cut off ...
When I first broke the story of Clearview AI in The New York Times in January 2020, people were shocked. Some were horrified. The tiny start-up had scraped 3 billion faces from Facebook, YouTube, ...
Law enforcement agencies across the United States and Canada are using Clearview AI – a secretive facial recognition startup with a database of 3 billion images – to identify children who are victims ...
The NYPD says it passed on using Clearview's tech, but that hasn't stopped dozens of cops from using the app "to this day." Shutterstock Rogue NYPD officers are using sketchy facial recognition ...
New facial recognition technology could be used to identify anyone who steps foot in a public place, and it’s already in use by police in the U.S., according to a report by the New York Times. A tiny ...
An iPhone app built by controversial facial recognition startup Clearview AI has been blocked by Apple, effectively banning the app from use. Apple confirmed to TechCrunch that the startup “violated” ...
Sports NFL Meet Clearview AI, the secretive company that might end privacy as we know it Detective Sgt. Nick Ferrara of the Gainesville Police Department said he has used Clearview's app to identify ...
Let's say a random stranger approaches you on the street, snaps a quick photo of you in a public place (which is perfectly legal), uploads the photo to an app, and soon finds your social media ...
When I first broke the story of Clearview AI in The New York Times in January 2020, people were shocked. Some were horrified. The tiny start-up had scraped 3 billion faces from Facebook, YouTube, ...