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Chuck Schumer Asks FBI To Investigate FaceApp (bbc.com) 108

Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer is calling on the FBI to investigate FaceApp after privacy concerns have been raised about the Russian company which developed the app. In a letter posted on Twitter, Mr Schumer called it "deeply disturbing" that personal data of U.S. citizens could go to a "hostile foreign power." The BBC reports: Wireless Lab, a company based in St. Petersburg, says it does not permanently store images, and does not collect troves of data -- only uploading specific photos selected by users for editing. "Even though the core R&D team is located in Russia, the user data is not transferred to Russia," a company statement reported by news site TechCrunch said. Mr Schumer however has asked that the FBI and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) investigate FaceApp. "I have serious concerns regarding both the protection of the data that is being aggregated as well as whether users are aware of who may have access to it," his letter reads.
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Chuck Schumer Asks FBI To Investigate FaceApp

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  • a bite late (Score:4, Insightful)

    by sizzlinkitty ( 1199479 ) on Thursday July 18, 2019 @10:40PM (#58949362)

    They should be investigating over half of the top free apps and games in the android store. Top free apps are known for data mining and we've always turned a blind eye because we wanted the free services. It's a great conversation to have but this should have happened in 2013-2014, before it reached the current, out of control level it is today. You'll be blown away at how many apps belong to Tencent, the mega chinese holding company.

    • You got that right. I've been banging a drum about "free" apps and services for years. I was called a fair number of dirty names and told I was overly paranoid. Well, now everyone has our personal information.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Wow, genius. Make data collection a crime, then we wonâ(TM)t need security/encryption.

      Thatâ(TM)s as smart as solving the healthcare crisis in the us by simply passing a law that made it a crime to not have a health insurance plan - punishable by a fine based on your income.

      Whatâ(TM)s next? Solve homelessness by making it a crime to live outdoors? End hunger by requiring everyone eat three meals a Day? End poverty by making it a crime to have less than $100 in your pocket at all time?

  • by kot-begemot-uk ( 6104030 ) on Friday July 19, 2019 @01:31AM (#58949818) Homepage
    What the app did is testing and collecting ML/AI data for standard police (state) tasks in face recognition: recognize a suspect based on archive pictures, recognize a suspect after altered appearance - dyed hair, wig, makeup, facial hair, glasses, etc
    It did not need to send a single picture to Russia to achieve the result. All it needed to do is to send the trained ML matrix coefficients.
    I wrote on it yesterday - the long read (full version) is on one of my blogs: https://www.fagain.co.uk/node/... [fagain.co.uk]
  • Asking the FBI to investigate an app, that people actually sign up for. This man has been elected to office for 40 years? Voters in his district should be ashamed.
  • by mrwireless ( 1056688 ) on Friday July 19, 2019 @01:47AM (#58949856)

    It could be the same verbal trick databrokers use: tell you that your data is not being sold. Because what they're really selling are the algorithmically derived scores and predictions they made from your data. Databrokers in the USA will claim is not your data anymore, that's theirs.

    The same could be going on here. Even though your photo might not go to russia, derived data might be. Which is what's the valuable thing anyway.

    • Exactly, I am surprised nobody is seeing this. It is soooooo bloody obvious. The guy trained his ML/AI using data we supplied for the rather obvious application of face recognition in the booming face recognition and police surveillance market https://www.fagain.co.uk/node/... [fagain.co.uk] He can now take the trained matrix derived from the data we gave him back to Russia to the sound of Kerching...
  • Ah the double standards, for decades US cooperations collect everything they can, but when another startup does something amazing it is a thread? Also users voluntarily used the app for fun, agreeing to their terms of service. What has the US FBI to investigate in that matter, ..??! :-/
  • You can find almost anyone's picture by googling their name. LinkedIn, Facebook... they all recommend putting your picture out there to succeed in engaging ohters socially on line. I just assume that anyone can find my picture by my name. Maybe there is more to it.. but I don't see what it is from this Slashdot summary.
  • See Viva Frei's vlawg on that terms of service. They are flat insane. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    Suppose you upload a picture of a celebrity, and they sue for copyright violation or royalties - you, the uploader, are on the hood, forever, no recourse, they don't have to take it down so you can stop paying... Just see the link. It gets more and more ridiculous for a long list as fast as Viva can expound on it. It makes punitive terms of service by the usual suspects look completely benign.
    Upload
  • face pro great app but data privacy main concent https://apkright.com/faceapp-p... [apkright.com]
  • Someone needs to investigate that a-hole!
  • of snooping thier citizen's data, because they are guilty themselves.
  • Schumer's latest attempt to stir the pot is ridiculous.
    He must not have realized that the PRC has been spying on US citizens for years.
    That was either okay with him or maybe they paid better.

  • While as FaceApp collects your pictures, Amdocs, hardhearted in St. Louis, MO is a front for the Mosad. It functions to provide cell phone billings for your usage. It keeps track of all of your phone calls to maintain a web of your contacts.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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