Clearview AI Fined €30.5m by Dutch Watchdog Over Illegal Data Collection
The US-based facial recognition data company may even have to pay up to €5.1m in penalties for non-compliance
Stay updated with the latest facial recognition news within the realm of information security, exploring privacy, trends, and security threats.
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Background for this topic.
Facial recognition analyzes facial images or video to estimate whether a face matches a claimed identity (1:1 verification) or to search for a person among enrolled identities (1:N identification). Systems typically extract a mathematical template rather than store only the original photo, then compare it with enrolled templates; accuracy depends on image quality, model behavior, and operating conditions. This differs from simple face detection, which only locates a face.
For security practitioners, the main concerns are spoofing with photos, video, masks, or synthetic media, and compromise of cameras, enrollment workflows, templates, or recognition APIs. Liveness or presentation-attack detection, protected sensors and APIs, strict enrollment and fallback controls, and rate limiting can reduce these risks, but facial matching should not automatically be treated as proof of identity. Facial templates are sensitive biometric data: unlike a password, they cannot readily be changed after exposure. Minimize collection, encrypt and segregate templates, restrict retention and access, test error rates, and address applicable privacy and biometric-data requirements.
The US-based facial recognition data company may even have to pay up to €5.1m in penalties for non-compliance
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Dutch DPA) has imposed a fine of €30.5 million ($33.7 million) against facial recognition firm Clearview AI for violating the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the European Union (E.U.) by building an "illegal database with billions of photos of faces," including those of Dutch citizens
The Dutch Data Protection Authority (Dutch DPA) has imposed a fine of €30.5 million ($33.7 million) on Clearview AI for unlawful data collection using facial recognition, including photos of Dutch citizens. [...]
Selfie-scraper again claims European law does not apply to it The Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA) has fined controversial facial recognition company Clearview AI €30.5 million ($33 million) over the "illegal" collation of images.…