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  2. Facial recognition company Clearview AI is now banned from selling its database of faces to private US businesses, as part of a settlement.

  3. Clearview AI fined for using photos in facial recognition ...

    www.aol.com/clearview-ai-fined-using-photos...

    Earlier this month, the DPA assessed a fine of 30.5 million euros (or about $33.7 million) against Clearview AI, a facial recognition startup company out of New York.

  4. Clearview AI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clearview_AI

    Clearview AI, Inc. is an American facial recognition company, providing software primarily to law enforcement and other government agencies. [2] The company's algorithm matches faces to a database of more than 20 billion images collected from the Internet, including social media applications. [1]

  5. Clearview AI banned from selling its facial recognition ...

    www.aol.com/news/clearview-ai-banned-selling...

    A company that gained notoriety for selling access to billions of facial photos, many culled from social media without the knowledge of the individuals depicted, faces major new restrictions to ...

  6. Fawkes (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fawkes_(software)

    Facial recognition works by pinpointing unique dimensions of facial features, which are then rendered as a vector graphic image of the face.. Fawkes is a facial image cloaking software created by the SAND (Security, Algorithms, Networking and Data) Laboratory of the University of Chicago. [1]

  7. Austin banned facial recognition technology for good reason ...

    www.aol.com/austin-banned-facial-recognition...

    A 2016 Georgetown Law study found half of all U.S. adults had photos in the facial recognition databases used by law enforcement, and 1 in 4 state and local police departments had access to this ...

  8. DataWorks Plus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DataWorks_Plus

    FACE Plus is the company's photo (still image) facial recognition program. It includes advanced filtering and can reconstruct a 3D model from photos to correct their angle, a feature called pose correction. [1] DataWorks uses facial recognition algorithms from NEC, [2] Rank One Computing (of Colorado, CEO Brendan Klare), [2] and Cognitec. [6]

  9. Detroit police challenged over face recognition flaws, bias

    www.aol.com/news/2020-06-24-detroit-police...

    A review of the industry’s leading facial recognition algorithms by the National Institute of Standards and Technology found they were more than 99% accurate when matching high-quality head ...