Current:Home > ScamsFacial recognition startup Clearview AI settles privacy suit -Prosperity Pathways
Facial recognition startup Clearview AI settles privacy suit
View
Date:2025-04-24 15:22:56
CHICAGO (AP) — Facial recognition startup Clearview AI reached a settlement Friday in an Illinois lawsuit alleging its massive photographic collection of faces violated the subjects’ privacy rights, a deal that attorneys estimate could be worth more than $50 million.
But the unique agreement gives plaintiffs in the federal suit a share of the company’s potential value, rather than a traditional payout. Attorneys’ fees estimated at $20 million also would come out of the settlement amount.
Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman, of the Northern District of Illinois, gave preliminary approval to the agreement Friday.
The case consolidated lawsuits from around the U.S. filed against Clearview, which pulled photos from social media and elsewhere on the internet to create a database it sold to businesses, individuals and government entities.
The company settled a separate case alleging violation of privacy rights in Illinois in 2022, agreeing to stop selling access to its database to private businesses or individuals. That agreement still allowed Clearview to work with federal agencies and local law enforcement outside Illinois, which has a strict digital privacy law.
Clearview does not admit any liability as part of the latest settlement agreement. Attorneys representing the company in the case did not immediately reply to email messages seeking comment Friday.
The lead plaintiffs’ attorney Jon Loevy said the agreement was a “creative solution” necessitated by Clearview’s financial status.
“Clearview did not have anywhere near the cash to pay fair compensation to the class, so we needed to find a creative solution,” Loevy said in a statement. “Under the settlement, the victims whose privacy was breached now get to participate in any upside that is ultimately generated, thereby recapturing to the class to some extent the ownership of their biometrics.”
It’s not clear how many people would be eligible to join the settlement. The agreement language is sweeping, including anyone whose images or data are in the company’s database and who lived in the U.S. starting in July 1, 2017.
A national campaign to notify potential plaintiffs is part of the agreement.
The attorneys for Clearview and the plaintiffs worked with Wayne Andersen, a retired federal judge who now mediates legal cases, to develop the settlement. In court filings presenting the agreement, Andersen bluntly writes that the startup could not have paid any legal judgment if the suit went forward.
“Clearview did not have the funds to pay a multi-million-dollar judgment,” he is quoted in the filing. “Indeed, there was great uncertainty as to whether Clearview would even have enough money to make it through to the end of trial, much less fund a judgment.”
But some privacy advocates and people pursuing other legal action called the agreement a disappointment that won’t change the company’s operations.
Sejal Zota is an attorney and legal director for Just Futures Law, an organization representing plaintiffs in a California suit against the company. Zota said the agreement “legitimizes” Clearview.
“It does not address the root of the problem,” Zota said. “Clearview gets to continue its practice of harvesting and selling people’s faces without their consent, and using them to train its AI tech.”
veryGood! (762)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Japanese actor-director Kitano says his new film explores homosexual relations in the samurai world
- US extends sanctions waiver allowing Iraq to buy electricity from Iran
- Israeli soccer team captain displays shoe of kidnapped child ahead of qualifying match in Hungary
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- In 'The Killer,' there's a method to his badness
- Detroit officer to stand trial after photojournalists were shot with pellets during a 2020 protest
- Key US spy tool will lapse at year’s end unless Congress and the White House can cut a deal
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Review: 'A Murder at the End of the World' is Agatha Christie meets TikTok (in a good way)
Ranking
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Donald Trump’s lawyers focus on outside accountants who prepared his financial statements
- 'King of scratchers' wins $5 million California Lottery prize sticking to superstition
- Global hacker investigated by federal agents in Puerto Rico pleads guilty in IPStorm case
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Protesting Oakland Athletics fans meet with owner John Fisher ahead of Las Vegas vote
- Landlord arrested after 3 people found stabbed to death in New York City home
- 13-year-old who fatally shot Sonic worker in Keene, Texas, sentenced to 12 years
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Pink fights 'hateful' book bans with pledge to give away 2,000 banned books at Florida shows
US Army to overturn century-old convictions of 110 Black soldiers
Authorities in El Salvador dismantle smuggling ring, arrest 10 including 2 police officers
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Billie Eilish on feeling 'protective' over Olivia Rodrigo: 'I was worried about her'
More parks, less money: Advocates say Mexico’s new budget doesn’t add up for natural protected areas
Shop the Best Bags from Loungefly’s Holiday Collection That Feature Your Favorite Character