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UK's data privacy watchdog may fine Clearview AI £17m

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Regulator’s ‘assertions are factually and legally incorrect’ biz tells El Reg
Clearview AI, the controversial startup known for scraping billions of selfies from people’s public social network profiles to train a facial-recognition system, may be fined just over £17m ($22.6m) by the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). The watchdog on Monday publicly mulled punishing Clearview following an investigation launched last year with the Australian Information Commissioner. The ICO believes the US biz broke Britain’s data-protection rules by, among other things, failing to have a “lawful reason” for collecting people’s personal photos and info, and not being transparent about how the data was used and stored for its facial-recognition applications. Clearview harvests people’s photos – 10 billion or more, it’s thought – from their public social media profiles, and then builds a face-matching system so that if, say, the police upload a picture of someone from a CCTV still, the software can locate that person in its database and provide officers the corresponding name and online profiles. As the regulator put it: “I have significant concerns that personal data was processed in a way that nobody in the UK will have expected,” Elizabeth Denham, Blighty’s Information Commissioner, added in a statement.

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