This article was published on February 11, 2020

Clearview AI’s false claims of accuracy increase the dangers of its face recognition software

False positives produced by the tool could put innocent people at risk of arrest -- or worse


Clearview AI’s false claims of accuracy increase the dangers of its face recognition software Image by: Mike MacKenzie

Clearview AI’s calamitous press campaign had another mishap yesterday when the ACLU slammed its claims of being rated “100% accurate” in a test based on a method created by the civil rights group.

The facial recognition company has been embroiled in a storm of controversy since The New York Times revealed that it was helping police match photos of suspects’ faces to images scraped from websites and social media platforms to aid in their investigations. Clearview says that it has amassed a database of more than three billion images and that its software has already been used by more than 600 law enforcement agencies.

Clearview’s use of people’s photos without gaining their consent has heightened privacy concerns about the use of facial recognition software. But it has also attracted awe for its astonishing claims of accuracy. If these claims are proven false, Clearview’s technology could become a whole lot scarier. False matches could lead to innocent people being accused of crimes they didn’t commit — particularly if they are women or people of color.

In a report obtained by BuzzFeed News, Clearview declared that an independent test had rated its image-matching software as “100% accurate”. It added that this accuracy “was consistent across all racial and demographic groups.”

The report states that this test used the same basic methodology as the American Civil Liberties Union had applied to test the accuracy of Amazon’s Rekognition software — a claim that the ACLU has refuted.

[Read: Facial recognition company CEO says he doesn’t need permission to use your face]

In a blogpost, ACLU Northern California attorney Jacob Snow wrote that “Clearview’s test couldn’t be more different from the ACLU’s work”, and called for the company to “stop manufacturing endorsements”.

“The report is absurd on many levels and further demonstrates that Clearview simply does not understand the harms of its technology in law enforcement hands,” Snow told BuzzFeed News.

Risks of misidentification

The basis of Clearview’s claim is a 2018 report by the ACLU on how law enforcement agencies were using Amazon’s Rekognition software. To test the tool’s accuracy, the ACLU used it to match photos of members of Congress to a database of mugshots. It fell far short of perfection, incorrectly identifying 28 Congress members as other people who had been arrested for a crime.

The results also revealed that false matches disproportionately affect ethnic minorities. Nearly 40% of the false matches were of people of color — despite them only making up 20% of Congress. Numerous other studies have found that facial recognition systems are far more likely to misidentify people of color and women than white men.

Furthermore, Clearview’s test compared the photos of members of Congress to images in its own enormous database, rather than to mugshots. This led to more questions from the ACLU about its accuracy. If police are searching for someone whose photo isn’t in the database, this could increase error rates. The matching is also less likely to be accurate when the photos are matched to those taken in real-world settings.

False matches could lead to wrongful arrests of innocent people. And the risks could grow far greater if Clearview can achieve its reported ambition to supply its software to authoritarian regimes with long track records of human rights abuses.

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