Facebook pays $550m settlement over illegally-collected facial recognition data
Facebook has agreed to pay $550m to users in Illinois
who sued it over its storing of biometric data without consent. This
allowed the social network to automatically tag photographs—and to build
a vast database of facial recognition data. It also contravenes the
state's privacy laws, reports the BBC:
The case
has been ongoing since 2015, and the settlement was announced in its
quarterly earnings. It comes as facial recognition use by the police,
and in public spaces, comes under intense scrutiny. The lawsuit against
Facebook was given the go-ahead in 2018 when a federal judge ruled it
could be heard as a class action (group) case. The appeals court
disagreed with Facebook's attempts to stop this, and in January the
Supreme Court also declined to review its appeal.
Facebook made the facial recognition feature opt-in a few months after the state Supreme Court left them on the hook.
Mike Isaac at The New York Times reports a "major victory" for privacy campaigners.
“The
Illinois law has real teeth. It pretty much stopped Facebook in its
tracks,” said Marc Rotenberg, the executive director of the Electronic
Privacy Information Center, a nonprofit group that filed a brief in the
Facebook case. “Tech firms and other companies that collect biometric
data must be very nervous right now.”
Since the
Illinois law was enacted in 2008, it has vexed companies that market
voice assistants, doorbell cameras, photo labeling and other technology
that may collect biometric details from people without their knowledge
or consent.
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