![]() While the company does not consider policing every biometric search by a customer to be its responsibility, Ton-That says it will revoke access from any client found to abuse its service, a capability which is an advantage of its cloud delivery model. To ensure ethical deployment, Clearview encourages customers to establish facial recognition policies, including oversight mechanisms and audit trails. People like academics researching bias reduction and misinformation need big datasets too, he notes. “I don’t think we want to live in a world where any big tech company can send a cease and desist and then control the public square,” Ton-That says. He also says Clearview has declined to delete the images it collected from platforms which have since requested their deletion, accusing the company of violating their terms of service. Ton-That says the even though the images the company builds its database from may have been put online for a different purpose than the company is using them for, legitimate public interest makes the practice acceptable. ![]() The half-hour interview was conducted by Post reporter Drew Harwell, who asked about the ethics of scraping data from the public internet, the importance of how accurate facial recognition developed in the United States is relative to other countries, how Clearview ensures its facial recognition is not abused, and the investors behind the company.
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