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AI Privacy Businesses

Photobucket Sued Over Plans To Sell User Photos, Biometric Identifiers To AI Companies (arstechnica.com) 9

Photobucket was sued Wednesday after a recent privacy policy update revealed plans to sell users' photos -- including biometric identifiers like face and iris scans -- to companies training generative AI models. From a report: The proposed class action seeks to stop Photobucket from selling users' data without first obtaining written consent, alleging that Photobucket either intentionally or negligently failed to comply with strict privacy laws in states like Illinois, New York, and California by claiming it can't reliably determine users' geolocation.

Two separate classes could be protected by the litigation. The first includes anyone who ever uploaded a photo between 2003 -- when Photobucket was founded -- and May 1, 2024. Another potentially even larger class includes any non-users depicted in photographs uploaded to Photobucket, whose biometric data has also allegedly been sold without consent.

Photobucket risks huge fines if a jury agrees with Photobucket users that the photo-storing site unjustly enriched itself by breaching its user contracts and illegally seizing biometric data without consent. As many as 100 million users could be awarded untold punitive damages, as well as up to $5,000 per "willful or reckless violation" of various statutes.

Photobucket Sued Over Plans To Sell User Photos, Biometric Identifiers To AI Companies

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  • Assuming they win, and I hope they do, the lawyers will get hundreds of millions, literally, and the class members will be lucky to get enough for a cup of coffee.

    • Lawyers usually get 25-35% of the class settlement.
      That's a lot of money- but it's not like it'll materially affect the amount received per class member... so what, really, is your gripe?
  • by aldousd666 ( 640240 ) on Wednesday December 11, 2024 @07:50PM (#65006863) Journal
    Regardless of your views on digital privacy, can I just say for a second that it's ludicrous to have physical jurisdiction over internet media based on state laws? I mean think about it, your data crosses how many different regions with different laws and we say that wherever you happen to be, their laws become the burden of everyone involved in this transaction. That's just really strange and bordering on unenforceable in the notional sense of the word.
    • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

      We host nextcloud instances, mail/imap servers, storage space etc. for customers who have privacy concerns. Everything is hosted locally in the country and most sites access is geofenced so it can only only be accessed from the country, web app firewall and ip firewall insure this so at least you have to to use an hop inside the country to attempt anything but we monitor things closely and our WAF (web app firewall) and ip firewall have a bunch of tailored rules.

      I guess the solution is back to local econom

    • China, Russia, North Korea, and lots of other "states" might disagree with you....
  • The new management has been trying to squeeze $$$ out of former customers for a while now, and this just stinks of yet another tactic to apply pressure. It's not gonna work on me. If they lived up to their promise and simply made my images available for download without a subscription that would be fine. Until they do that I'm gonna refuse to let them off the hook.

  • It has a cute name, so that means it is friendly and good.

  • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Wednesday December 11, 2024 @09:47PM (#65007035)

    "Botophucket" works for me, because they considered their users' privacy just long enough to say "phucket". I hope those phuckers die in a phire.

The fancy is indeed no other than a mode of memory emancipated from the order of space and time. -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge

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