Clearview AI Has New Tools To Identify People in Photos (wired.com) 24
Clearview AI has stoked controversy by scraping the web for photos and applying facial recognition to give police and others an unprecedented ability to peer into our lives. Now the company's CEO wants to use artificial intelligence to make Clearview's surveillance tool even more powerful. From a report: It may make it more dangerous and error-prone as well. Clearview has collected billions of photos from across websites that include Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter and uses AI to identify a particular person in images. Police and government agents have used the company's face database to help identify suspects in photos by tying them to online profiles. The company's cofounder and CEO, Hoan Ton-That, tells WIRED that Clearview has now collected more than 10 billion images from across the web -- more than three times as many as has been previously reported. Ton-That says the larger pool of photos means users, most often law enforcement, are more likely to find a match when searching for someone. He also claims the larger data set makes the company's tool more accurate.
Clearview combined web-crawling techniques, advances in machine learning that have improved facial recognition, and a disregard for personal privacy to create a surprisingly powerful tool. Ton-That demonstrated the technology through a smartphone app by taking a photo of the reporter. The app produced dozens of images from numerous US and international websites, each showing the correct person in images captured over more than a decade. The allure of such a tool is obvious, but so is the potential for it to be misused. Clearview's actions sparked public outrage and a broader debate over expectations of privacy in an era of smartphones, social media, and AI. [...] The pushback has not deterred Ton-That. He says he believes most people accept or support the idea of using facial recognition to solve crimes. "The people who are worried about it, they are very vocal, and that's a good thing, because I think over time we can address more and more of their concerns," he says.
Some of Clearview's new technologies may spark further debate. Ton-That says it is developing new ways for police to find a person, including "deblur" and "mask removal" tools. The first takes a blurred image and sharpens it using machine learning to envision what a clearer picture would look like; the second tries to envision the covered part of a person's face using machine learning models that fill in missing details of an image using a best guess based on statistical patterns found in other images. These capabilities could make Clearview's technology more attractive but also more problematic. It remains unclear how accurately the new techniques work, but experts say they could increase the risk that a person is wrongly identified and could exacerbate biases inherent to the system.
Clearview combined web-crawling techniques, advances in machine learning that have improved facial recognition, and a disregard for personal privacy to create a surprisingly powerful tool. Ton-That demonstrated the technology through a smartphone app by taking a photo of the reporter. The app produced dozens of images from numerous US and international websites, each showing the correct person in images captured over more than a decade. The allure of such a tool is obvious, but so is the potential for it to be misused. Clearview's actions sparked public outrage and a broader debate over expectations of privacy in an era of smartphones, social media, and AI. [...] The pushback has not deterred Ton-That. He says he believes most people accept or support the idea of using facial recognition to solve crimes. "The people who are worried about it, they are very vocal, and that's a good thing, because I think over time we can address more and more of their concerns," he says.
Some of Clearview's new technologies may spark further debate. Ton-That says it is developing new ways for police to find a person, including "deblur" and "mask removal" tools. The first takes a blurred image and sharpens it using machine learning to envision what a clearer picture would look like; the second tries to envision the covered part of a person's face using machine learning models that fill in missing details of an image using a best guess based on statistical patterns found in other images. These capabilities could make Clearview's technology more attractive but also more problematic. It remains unclear how accurately the new techniques work, but experts say they could increase the risk that a person is wrongly identified and could exacerbate biases inherent to the system.
This is real next-gen tech (Score:1, Interesting)
I would buy this product in a heartbeat.
Re: (Score:2)
Nah, I expect those morons to do it *themselves*. :)
And watch ads to gain the "privilege" to "use" my "services"!
Maybe give it a nice name like "social media" or "Facebook"!
The neural net would only "assist"... nudge nudge, wink wink, do it already so we stop bugging you and give you empty "reward" triggers!
Yeah, reality's retardedness and evilness always go beyond what you and I can even think up. ;)
Can this be stopped by copyright law? (Score:2)
In the US, at least...the person that trips the shutter on a camera is the defacto copyright owner of the photograph.
And, unless that person signs away those copyrights (for money or whatever reason) they own the copyrights to that image.
Couldn't someone start up a class action lawsuit against this and ANY other company that has scraped these photos off the web without compensation for computer training?
I mean that alone should warrant a win, but for a sugar coating on top, you sh
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
For copyright assignment, sure. But for practical purposes, is almost trivial to grant a fully paid-up, worldwide, irrevocable, sublicensable, yadda yadda copyright license to one's work.
Re: (Score:2)
Interesting solution approach, and I like it. The other response to you mentioned tricky EULAs and ToSs that transfer copyrights, but if your approach got over enough of the legal hurdles, then it would still create too much legal jeopardy for corporate cancers to play the game. (Not sure if Clearview has yet grown big enough to qualify as a cancer. It might be merely at the malignant growth stage. (But it's clearly beyond suspicious.))
Re: (Score:2)
They are a special kind of conspiracy theorist, that I call black-eyers.
People who block out all the evil in the world because they can't handle it, and decided to just let go and embrace being fucked in the ass by everyone.
You can recognize them by them behaving exactly like your usual conspiracy theorists, but with one important distinction: They side *with* the current powers, and call everyone who rattles their delusions a "conspiracy theorist, no matter if he actually is, or just points out their naive
Re: (Score:2)
Watch Dogs 1 and more so 2 made a game out of the idea.
Don't Like It? Don't Post It. (Score:2)
Re:Don't Like It? Don't Post It. (Score:5, Insightful)
Lol, call me when you get friends, and they post your shit online.
Or if you ever go outside, and some standard moron or media moron publishes your shit online.
Or some asshole hacks your camera and demands ransom to take the pictures down... but they already spread.
You falsely imply that it's entirely in your control.
Did you know, that if you use a modern PC or smartphone with a modern OS... like Intel CPUs, Windows, OSX, Android, etc, it de-facto already *is* online. Whether that happens by it actually being put onto a "cloud" or whatnot, or simply by letting the thugs (e.g. Content Mafia or advertiser gangs) onto your system.
Yeah, you "agreed" to running that code. You even paid for it!
Of course everything is simple, if you ignore all the details. ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, that's not true.
Per my post a bit above yours...in the US at least, the person that trips the shutter on a camera is automatically the copyright holder.
Legally, someone else cannot "use them for anything they like" without permission from the copyright holder.
People have been sued for a lot of $$ based on this.
Per my post above, I'm sur
Re: (Score:2)
Talk about state-sponsored terrorists! (Score:2)
When is somebody sending the special forces to take *them* out?
If necessary, invade the whole country.
I think it's about time now!
They are as much a threat as the Taliban, if not more.
Cart, horse. (Score:3)
Clearview combined web-crawling techniques, advances in machine learning that have improved facial recognition, and a disregard for personal privacy to create a surprisingly powerful tool.
For there to be a disregard, there first has to be rules.
Re: (Score:1)
There are rules, the Illinois Biometric Privacy Act is one of them:
https://www.aclu-il.org/en/cam... [aclu-il.org]
Basically, businesses cannot store facial geometry and other personal data without written consent of people who reside in the state of Illinois.
Fix it for them ... (Score:2)
The first takes a blurred image and sharpens it using machine learning to envision what a clearer picture would look like; ...
"might look like"
"guesses what the covered parts of a face might look like based on guesses from other photos"
Pretty sure anyone could tweak the results to look like anything.
(Just ask Gaeta and Baltar about that in BSG S1:E7 "Six Degrees of Separation" ...)
Re: (Score:2)
Ok...
https://www.clearview.ai/leade... [clearview.ai]
False matches (birthday paradox) (Score:2)
In facial recognition is there a similar problem? Surely 8 billion faces would generate a vast number of collisions (false matches).