https://stealthoptional.com/news/ukraine-ai-facial-recognition-russia/

One of my friend shared this information with me and he said: “Attorney Tor 
Ekeland defends Clearview AI's use of images…Same Tor Ekeland that has served 
on the board of Your Anonymous News (YAN), which is considered the primary 
mouthpiece of "Anonymous"”

https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Clearview_AI

Clearview AI is a surveillance technology company that provides facial 
recognition software, which is used by private companies, law enforcement 
agencies, universities and individuals. Clearview AI runs a powerful neural 
network which processes photographs of faces and compares their precise 
measurement and symmetry to a massive database of pictures, scraped from 
various social media sites, to suggest possible matches. Founded by Hoan 
Ton-That and Richard 
Schwartz[1](https://www.businessinsider.com/what-is-clearview-ai-controversial-facial-recognition-startup-2020-3),
 the company maintained a low profile until late 2019, when its usage by law 
enforcement was reported on. Multiple public records requests have uncovered 
thousands of emails to law enforcement agencies across the United States.

In January 2020, Twitter sent a cease and desist 
letter[2](https://www.businessinsider.com/clearview-ai-facial-recognition-google-youtube-surveillance-police-law-enforcement-2020-2)and
 requested the deletion of all scraped data. This was followed by similar 
actions by YouTube (via Google) and Facebook in February. Clearview sells 
access to its database to law enforcement agencies for use in cases such as 
child sexual abuse and has over 3,000 active users including the Federal Bureau 
of Investigation and Department of Homeland 
Security[3](https://www.businessinsider.com/ice-clearview-ai-sign-contract-facial-recognition-2020-8).
 A data 
breach[4](https://www.thedailybeast.com/clearview-ai-facial-recognition-company-that-works-with-law-enforcement-says-entire-client-list-was-stolen)in
 early 2020 revealed that numerous commercial organizations were on Clearview's 
customer list as well.

Contents

- [1History](https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Clearview_AI#History)
- [2Marketing efforts and 
pushback](https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Clearview_AI#Marketing_efforts_and_pushback)
- 
[3Technology](https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Clearview_AI#Technology)
- [4Notable 
associates](https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Clearview_AI#Notable_associates)
- [5Ongoing Research 
Efforts](https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Clearview_AI#Ongoing_Research_Efforts)
- [6External 
Links](https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Clearview_AI#External_Links)

History

Clearview operated in near secrecy until the release of The New York Times 
exposé titled "The Secretive Company That Might End Privacy as We Know It" in 
January 
2020[5](https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/18/technology/clearview-privacy-facial-recognition.html).
 Over 40 tech and civil rights organizations including Color of Change, Council 
on American–Islamic Relations, Demand Progress, Electronic Frontier Foundation, 
Electronic Privacy Information Center, Fight for the Future, Freedom of the 
Press Foundation, Media Alliance, National Center for Transgender Equality, 
National Hispanic Media Coalition, National LGBTQ Task Force, Project On 
Government Oversight, Restore the Fourth, and the Woodhull Freedom Foundation 
sent a letter to the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) and 
four congressional committees, expressing their concerns with facial 
recognition and Clearview, asking the PCLOB to ban the use of facial 
recognition[6](https://epic.org/privacy/facerecognition/PCLOB-Letter-FRT-Suspension.pdf).

It sparked a global debate on the regulation of facial recognition technology 
by governments and law enforcement. Numerous international media outlets called 
for a ban of the Clearview's software upon learning that 3 billion images had 
been collected from social media websites. Law enforcement officers have stated 
that Clearview's facial recognition is far superior in identifying perpetrators 
from any angle than previously used technology. Clearview submits accuracy 
reports to the agencies that use their service but those accuracy studies are 
not made open to independent review.

The New York Times identified Hoan Ton-That and Richard Schwartz as the 
company's founders with investors including Peter Thiel and Naval Ravikant. 
Ton-That worked as a software developer at AngelList prior to founding 
Clearview AI. Ton-That first gained public notice in 2009, when he created 
ViddyHo, a website that spammed users' contacts and was described as phishing 
or a computer worm. Ton-That denied creating a phishing site and claimed a 
software bug was the cause. He then created fastforwarded.com, a similar 
phishing site. He also created an app called "Trump Hair", which placed Donald 
Trump's hair on photos. Richard Schwartz was a graduate of Columbia University 
and New York University, holding degrees in History and Public Policy. He began 
his career working for Henry Stern, when Stern was a member of the New York 
City Council. Schwartz continued working with Stern during Stern's tenure as 
New York City Parks Commissioner under New York City Mayor Ed Koch. Schwartz 
heavily contributed to the 1980s New York City Parks restoration and continued 
public service under Mayor David Dinkins. He was appointed senior policy 
advisor to New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani in the 1990s. Schwartz authored 
the Work Experience Program, a welfare reform program. Schwartz founded 
Opportunity America, a job matching service for welfare recipients, one day 
after leaving public service in 1997. He served as Editorial Editor at the New 
York Daily News in the 2000s. Ton-That and Schwartz met at the Manhattan 
Institute.

Marketing efforts and pushback

Most of the customers that Clearview has obtained has been through the offers 
of free trials for use of their technology. According to Clearview AI contracts 
reviewed by Project PM researchers, a one user slot averages $2000, with most 
law enforcement departments opting for 10 or more user slots.

Contract with Texas Dept of Public 
Safety[7](https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/20531958-texas-dep-public-safety-20p0018687)

Invoice with Miami Police 
Dept[8](https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/20531941-miami-fl-clearview_invoice_2_fhouxcy)

Budget Request from Gainesville, FL 
PD[9](https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/20531578-gainesville-fl-moss-final-clearview-ai-10000)

In March 2020, NBC News stated that Clearview was pitching their technology to 
states for use in contact tracing to assist with the COVID-19 
pandemic.[10](https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/facial-recognition-company-wants-help-contact-tracing-senator-has-questions-n1197291)

Cybersecurity expert Josephine Wolff called out Clearview in an op-ed in The 
New York 
Times[11](https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/25/opinion/coronavirus-privacy-phone-data.html):"The
 United States government's engagement with the facial recognition company 
Clearview AI on coronavirus tracking is especially worrisome in this regard", 
and that "The company's product is still every bit as dangerous, invasive and 
unnecessary as it was before the spread of the coronavirus."

Senator Edward J. Markey wrote Clearview, stating "Widespread use of your 
technology could facilitate dangerous behavior and could effectively destroy 
individuals' ability to go about their daily lives anonymously." Markey asked 
Clearview to detail aspects of its business to understand these privacy, bias, 
and security concerns. Clearview responded through an attorney, declining to 
reveal information. In response to this, Markey wrote a second letter, calling 
their response unacceptable and containing dubious claims, highlighting the 
concern of Clearview"selling its technology to authoritarian regimes" and 
possible violations of COPPA. Senator Markey wrote his third letter to the 
company with concerns, stating "this health crisis cannot justify using 
unreliable surveillance tools that could undermine our privacy rights."Markey 
asked a series of questions about what government entities Clearview has been 
talking with, in addition to unanswered privacy 
concerns.[12](https://www.markey.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Clearview%20Letter%203%20-%20Response%205.15.20.pdf)

In June, 2021 the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued a report 
issuing recommendations to the 26 government agencies using facial recognition 
technology, inclusive to Clearview 
AI.[13](https://archive.org/details/ProjPM-gao-21-518)

Excerpt:

"Facial recognition technology is a powerful tool used by the federal law 
enforcement community. Federal agencies that employ law enforcement officers 
rely on systems with facial recognition technology, and the potentially 
millions or billions of photos stored in these systems, to help generate 
investigative leads and solve crimes.

However, 13 federal agencies cannot assess the risks of using non-federal 
systems because they are unaware of what systems are used by employees. By 
implementing a mechanism to track what non-federal systems are used by 
employees, agencies will have better visibility into the technologies they rely 
upon to conduct criminal investigations. In addition, by assessing the risks of 
using these systems, including privacy and accuracy-related risks, agencies 
will be better positioned to mitigate any risks to themselves and the public."

Technology

Clearview states their technology is not for public consumption and meant for 
law enforcement usage, but their marketing material encouraged users to "run 
wild" with their 
use[14](https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/clearview-ai-cops-run-wild-facial-recognition-lawsuits),
 suggesting searching for family and friends as well as celebrities. Clearview 
also indicated they were targeting private security firms and marketed to 
casinos through Clearview's Jessica Medeiros Garrison. Clearview planned 
expansion to many countries, including Brazil, Colombia, and Nigeria, a cluster 
that Buzzfeed titles "authoritarian regimes" including United Arab Emirates, 
Qatar, and Singapore, and General Data Protection Regulation-following EU 
countries including Italy, Greece, and Netherlands.

While Clearview's app is only supposed to be privately accessible to customers, 
Gizmodo found the Android application package in an unsecured Amazon S3 bucket. 
In addition to application tracking (Google Analytics, Crashlytics), it 
contains references to Google Play Services (Firebase or AppMeasurement), 
requests precise phone location data, and appeared to have features for voice 
search, sharing a free demo account to other users, augmented reality 
integration with Vuzix, and sending gallery photos or taking photos from the 
app itself. There were also references to scanning barcodes on a drivers 
license and to RealWear.

Clearview also operates a secondary business, Insight Camera, which provides 
AI-enabled security 
cameras[15](https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/carolinehaskins1/clearview-facial-recognition-insight-camera-glasses).
 It is targeted at "retail, banking and residential buildings". Two customers 
have used the technology, United Federation of Teachers and Rudin Management.

Notable associates

Multiple reports identified Clearview's association with far-right personas 
dating back to 2016, when the company claimed to sever ties with two employees. 
Hon That has been linked to Chuck Johnson, Mike Cernovich, Douglass Mackey, and 
Paul Nehlen.

A Huffington Post story published in April 
2020[16](https://www.huffpost.com/entry/clearview-ai-facial-recognition-alt-right_n_5e7d028bc5b6cb08a92a5c48)identified
 a Slack channel from 2016 that was created by Charles C. Johnson and Pax 
Dickinson called WeSearchr taken from a crowd-funding site of the same name. 
Channel members included Ton-That, Schwartz, Marko Jukic, Tyler Bass and 
Douglass Mackey who all worked for Smartcheckr, Clearview's original name 
before rebranding. Mackey was associated with alt-right white supremacist 
congressional candidate Paul Nehlen. Clearview claimed to have had no knowledge 
of Mackey's persona, though Mackey was also part of the WeSearchr Slack under 
his fake name. After Mackey's persona was revealed, Schwartz used a reputation 
management company to obscure his involvement with Smartcheckr.

The New York Times described early use of Clearview's app as "a secret 
plaything of the rich", describing it as a perk given to potential investors in 
their Series A fundraising 
round[17](https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/05/technology/clearview-investors.html).
 Billionaire John Catsimatidis, a friend of Richard Schwartz, used it to 
identify someone his daughter dated to "make sure he wasn't a charlatan" and 
piloted it at one of his Gristedes grocery market in New York City to identify 
shoplifters. Investor Hal Lambert of Point Bridge Capital described having the 
app and showing it to friends. Investor David Scalzo, founder of Kirenaga 
Partners, said that his "school-aged daughters enjoyed playing with the app". 
Doug Leone, a potential investor at Sequoia Capital, was given access, which 
was revoked after Sequoia declined to invest. Actor and investor Ashton Kutcher 
described an app in September 2019 that was likely Clearview.

After testing Clearview for accuracy, Nicholas Cassimatis was allowed to 
continue using the app and described demoing it to people "like a parlor 
trick".Noted far-right "troll king" Charles C. Johnson had an account on 
Clearview as well as Tor Ekeland [needs own page] and Palmer Luckey [needs own 
page].

Tor Ekeland emerged to field media requests on behalf of Clearview 
AI.[18](https://www.huffpost.com/entry/clearview-ai-facial-recognition-alt-right_n_5e7d028bc5b6cb08a92a5c48)Ekeland
 was also (Weev) Auernheimer’s lawyer and had made his name by getting the 
neo-Nazi out of federal prison.

Tor contends that Clearview AI is entitled to use people's faces under First 
Amendment.

“I mean, first of all, the common law has never recognized a right to privacy 
for your face,” Ekeland said. “It's kind of a bizarre argument to make because 
[your face is the] most public thing out 
there.”[19](https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2020/03/06/clearview-ai-lawyer-tor-ekeland-says-your-face-is-public-property/)

Disclosure: Tor Ekeland visited Project PM's[Barrett 
Brown](https://www.projectpm.wiki/index.php?title=Barrett_Brown)in prison 
(2014).[20](https://www.vice.com/en/article/ae3g5p/a-dispatch-from-outside-barrett-browns-prison)

Clearview hired Jessica Medeiros Garrison, a Republican operative who managed 
Luther Strange's Alabama Attorney General campaign, then became Chief Counsel 
and Deputy Attorney General the following year. She successfully sued blogger 
Roger Shuler for defamation related to her and Luther Strange. In a court case 
involving campaign finance violations by Democratic Alabama state senator 
Lowell Barron, Barron's attorneys accused Strange of paying $350,000 to 
Garrison. Garrison was later the director of the Republican Attorneys General 
Association (RAGA) during a period where it was involved in sending dark money 
to Luther Strange, which was returned after the transaction was uncovered, 
having violated Alabama campaign finance law. Garrison also worked for Balch & 
Bingham until May 2017. Balch & Bingham is a law firm closely associated with 
Jeff Sessions's political career and also one of his largest donors.

Additionally, Tor Ekeland has served on the board of Your Anonymous News 
(YAN).[21](https://cdn.muckrock.com/foia_files/2021/03/31/2021-056-419.pdf)

The AI Now Institute linked Clearview with the Banjo surveillance 
platform[22](https://www.engadget.com/2020-03-04-banjo-ai-utah-law-enforcement-surveillance.html)

Credit to[Ron 
Brynaert](http://archive.pressthink.org/2005/10/31/bry_tmsm.html)for edits.

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