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AI Privacy

Clearview AI Used Your Face. Now You May Get a Stake in the Company. (nytimes.com) 40

A facial recognition start-up, accused of invasion of privacy in a class-action lawsuit, has agreed to a settlement, with a twist: Rather than cash payments, it would give a 23 percent stake in the company to Americans whose faces are in its database. From a report: Clearview AI, which is based in New York, scraped billions of photos from the web and social media sites like Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram to build a facial recognition app used by thousands of police departments, the Department of Homeland Security and the F.B.I. After The New York Times revealed the company's existence in 2020, lawsuits were filed across the country. They were consolidated in federal court in Chicago as a class action.

The litigation has proved costly for Clearview AI, which would most likely go bankrupt before the case made it to trial, according to court documents. The company and those who sued it were "trapped together on a sinking ship," lawyers for the plaintiffs wrote in a court filing proposing the settlement. "These realities led the sides to seek a creative solution by obtaining for the class a percentage of the value Clearview could achieve in the future," added the lawyers, from Loevy + Loevy in Chicago.

Anyone in the United States who has a photo of himself or herself posted publicly online -- so almost everybody -- could be considered a member of the class. The settlement would collectively give the members a 23 percent stake in Clearview AI, which is valued at $225 million, according to court filings. (Twenty-three percent of the company's current value would be about $52 million.) If the company goes public or is acquired, those who had submitted a claim form would get a cut of the proceeds. Alternatively, the class could sell its stake. Or the class could opt, after two years, to collect 17 percent of Clearview's revenue, which it would be required to set aside.

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Clearview AI Used Your Face. Now You May Get a Stake in the Company.

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  • your stock will be worth about $00.02
  • by PubJeezy ( 10299395 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @10:11AM (#64548845)
    You can't steal someone's privacy and expect to pay them back with schrute bucks. If they don't have the money to pay their fine, they should sell the stock themselves.

    This is not a plausible, reasonable, healthy or sane solution to the problem.

    Stock in a company with no hard assets or long term revenue is not a real asset. This is pathetic. Web 2.0 busted itself out. American's deserve a real stake, not some fake stock.

    Clearview is a Thiel company, right? I have a theory that he's kinda broke. All the scams he's built are blowing up and he's the one holding the bag. He's a scammer with almost no money and ton of worthless tech stocks and about 400 million enemies. Of course he's going to try to pay off debts with stock...it's all he has.
    • by pitch2cv ( 1473939 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @10:27AM (#64548883)

      Stock in a company with no hard assets or long term revenue

      On top, those opposing the corporation by suing them, with this move, turn to actively supporting it to grow. This is so wrong in so many ways.

      • That doesn't seem like a realistic concern. For stock ownership to turn into any meaningful form of support the people getting these shares would have to be getting a significant chunk of value and they'd have to hold it. Those are some very implausible assumptions.

        If this was actually allowed to happen here's how it would play: insiders would sell off all of their shares as soon as the settlement was announced which would signal a complete lack of support for the company. that would tank the value of the
      • by unrtst ( 777550 )

        Right!?! I didn't want my face in their system. Now I have my face in their system AND a stake in the company?!?!?

        IMO, the only way that comes close to working is if they divided the entirety of the company among the stakeholders. Then the people would have majority control of the company. It could, and probably would, still go south for those who didn't want to be a part of it, but there's at least a chance they could have a say and effect change. At 23% stake divided across millions, you're just along for

  • by schneidafunk ( 795759 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @10:14AM (#64548851)

    I come in and steal your identity, get caught, and then give you a percentage of the money I make with your stolen identity?

  • My initial reaction was a skeptical huff, but the more I thought about it, it's actually an interesting thing. So many of these class action lawsuits result in a check for couple bucks. So why not something a little different? I guess it comes down to whether an action like this should be bankrupting the company as a Bad Company rather than potentially enriching the impacted class.

    Still not a fan of the whole facial recognition/law enforcement/all that jargle, especially with the false positives it seems to

  • Not enough. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by msauve ( 701917 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @10:16AM (#64548863)
    Where's the part where they remove your face from their database?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Nate237 ( 10740 )

      Yes. AI companies will keep doing things like this if they think they can just pay out later worst case. If they are forced to start destroying the things built with personal info and data they don't own, maybe they'll start to think twice. Until then, they'll just keep doing what they're doing.

    • Re:Not enough. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Brain-Fu ( 1274756 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @11:29AM (#64549023) Homepage Journal

      You seem to be looking for the morally correct solution. There is no profit in that.

      It IS possible to force this issue, but it would require ordinary people to form a political lobby and push for it, making real sacrifices and being tenacious. Nobody cares about this enough to do that, so it won't happen. And therefore, companies will violate our rights, get away with it, and give us some sort of token compensation that amounts to nothing and say "there, all good."

      The root of the issue is that most people don't care about their privacy enough to fight for it. That's my main point. There will always be evil people attempting evil things for their own profit. If it's not this guy, it's someone else trying the same scheme. Our willingness to fight for what we care about is what keeps them in check. And, that willingness is not there. So, abuses like this will roll forward, one way or another.

    • Exactly. Agree to the shares? You keep the other shareholders afloat.

      Send the company into bankruptcy? Someone else will buy the assets.

      Either way, itâ(TM)s a smokescreen to hide the privacy violation that persists and will persist until these databases and models are destroyed.

  • With all due respect to victims of actual rape, Isn't this somewhat analagous to being forced to marry your rapist?

  • catch 22 (Score:4, Insightful)

    by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @10:41AM (#64548913)

    You cannot find out if you are a member of the class without giving Clearview AI your picture.

  • Remember, sovereign immunity preemptively blocks any class-action suit that members of the affected class might wish to raise against the government prosecutor who accepts this deal on their behalf.
  • Which leaves just $32 million ... so around ten cents per victim since the victims are every citizen of the country. Those lawyers sure did each of their clients a service. :/

    The plaintiffs’ lawyers would also be paid from the eventual sale or cash-out; they said they would ask for no more than 39 percent of the amount received by the class. (Thirty-nine percent of $52 million would be about $20 million.)

  • I wonder... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by DaFallus ( 805248 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @11:23AM (#64549007)
    can I steal $10 million from a bank and my only punishment be that I pay the bank a small percentage of the interest I'm making off of the money I stole from them?
  • by djp2204 ( 713741 ) on Friday June 14, 2024 @12:09PM (#64549141)

    I want it destroyed as if it never existed

  • This is why I haven't had a profile pic on anything in over a decade.

  • ...if I'm now a stockholder? Where's my snail-mail documentation?

  • I'd like to be this kind of stake [wordpress.com]holder.
  • Let's just bankrupt the company. Problem solved.

  • First they steal my face... now, instead of paying it's victims for the crime, they are offering to sign you up as a share holder, where they would then have on file a ton of additional personal information on me, for synthetic money with no real value?

    Oh eat these rich mf'ers! Let's have a fricken feast with them!

  • How ironic would it be that our first step toward functional communism would be the people owning a piece of the surveillance state.
  • I'm curious if this triggers (or is protected by) any anti-dilution clauses, or what class of shares these will be (preferred, restricted, etc). Just owning shares doesn't mean you've got a say in governance, or a fair share of profits. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

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