FB facial recognition lawsuit
Facebook loses first round in suit over storing biometric data Facebook Inc (FB.O <http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=FB.O>) lost the first round in a court fight against some of its users who sued the social networking company, alleging it "unlawfully" collected and stored users' biometric data derived from their faces in photographs. The judge presiding over the case in a California federal court on Thursday turned down Facebook's motion seeking dismissal of the suit. Facebook filed the motion arguing that the users could not file a complaint under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) as they had agreed in their user agreement that California law would govern their disputes with the company, and that BIPA does not apply to "tag suggestions." The court found that Illinois law applies and that the plaintiffs have stated a claim under BIPA. The complainants had alleged that Facebook's face recognition feature that suggests "tags" on photos unlawfully collected and stored biometric data, in violation of the Illinois BIPA. The case was filed by some Illinois residents under Illinois law, but the parties agreed to transfer the case to the California court, the court order showed. Facebook was also hit with a lawsuit over its plan to issue new stock last month. The company said in April it will create a new class of non-voting shares in a move aimed at letting Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg give away his wealth without relinquishing control of the social media juggernaut he founded. Facebook was not immediately available for comment. <http://www.reuters.com/article/us-facebook-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XX08U> Alberto
Grazie, Alberto. Trovo particolarmente interessante il fatto che la corte abbia deciso di applicare la legge dell'Illinois (che pavlovianamente mi fa venire in mente i Blues Brothers, ma non voglio divagare) nonostante Facebook avesse richiesto di applicare la legge californiana. A proposito di mercato unico digitale... ;) A presto, Andrea On Saturday, May 7, 2016, Alberto Cammozzo <ac+nexa@zeromx.net> wrote:
Facebook loses first round in suit over storing biometric data
Facebook Inc (FB.O < http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=FB.O>) lost the first round in a court fight against some of its users who sued the social networking company, alleging it "unlawfully" collected and stored users' biometric data derived from their faces in photographs.
The judge presiding over the case in a California federal court on Thursday turned down Facebook's motion seeking dismissal of the suit.
Facebook filed the motion arguing that the users could not file a complaint under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) as they had agreed in their user agreement that California law would govern their disputes with the company, and that BIPA does not apply to "tag suggestions."
The court found that Illinois law applies and that the plaintiffs have stated a claim under BIPA.
The complainants had alleged that Facebook's face recognition feature that suggests "tags" on photos unlawfully collected and stored biometric data, in violation of the Illinois BIPA.
The case was filed by some Illinois residents under Illinois law, but the parties agreed to transfer the case to the California court, the court order showed.
Facebook was also hit with a lawsuit over its plan to issue new stock last month.
The company said in April it will create a new class of non-voting shares in a move aimed at letting Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg give away his wealth without relinquishing control of the social media juggernaut he founded.
Facebook was not immediately available for comment.
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-facebook-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XX08U>
Alberto
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-- -- I speak only for myself. Sometimes I do not even agree with myself. Keep it in mind. Twitter: @andreaglorioso Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/andrea.glorioso LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=1749288&trk=tab_pro
La legge dell'Illinois impazza: <http://canmua.net/california/shutterfly-settles-facial-recognition-lawsuit-w...> Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation top news Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation update daily A lawsuit brought by an Illinois man who accused photo-sharing website Shutterfly of violating his privacy by using facial recognition software to identify his face has been settled for an undisclosed amount. The case, which was given the go-ahead to proceed in January by a federal judge in Chicago, was being closely watched because if it had gone to trial it could have had implications for Facebook and other companies that use facial recognition software. Illinois resident Brian Norberg alleged in the suit, which sought class-action status, that his face ended up in Shutterfly's database after a friend uploaded and tagged a photo of him in February 2015. Shutterfly measured the contours of his face and the distance between his eyes, nose and ears to create a template it used to suggest other photos of Norberg be tagged with his name, the suit said, alleging that Shutterfly had violated Norberg's rights under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act. [...] E Facebook si fa prudente: Facebook announced this morning that its private photo-sharing application, Facebook Moments <http://www.momentsapp.com/>, is now available in all countries worldwide, thanks the launch of a new, modified version in the EU and Canada. While the U.S. and other international versions of the application take advantage of facial recognition technology to suggest which friends to share with by identifying who appears in your photos, the modified being launched now does away with that feature due to various privacy laws and regulations in these markets. This makes the app a bit more labor-intensive, as it now can’t automatically identify who is in your photos – it can only suggest that a group of photos that /may/ contain the same person. [...] <http://techcrunch.com/2016/05/10/facebook-moments-launches-in-the-eu-canada-...> Alberto On 07/05/2016 12:27, Alberto Cammozzo wrote:
Facebook loses first round in suit over storing biometric data
Facebook Inc (FB.O <http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=FB.O>) lost the first round in a court fight against some of its users who sued the social networking company, alleging it "unlawfully" collected and stored users' biometric data derived from their faces in photographs.
The judge presiding over the case in a California federal court on Thursday turned down Facebook's motion seeking dismissal of the suit.
Facebook filed the motion arguing that the users could not file a complaint under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) as they had agreed in their user agreement that California law would govern their disputes with the company, and that BIPA does not apply to "tag suggestions."
The court found that Illinois law applies and that the plaintiffs have stated a claim under BIPA.
The complainants had alleged that Facebook's face recognition feature that suggests "tags" on photos unlawfully collected and stored biometric data, in violation of the Illinois BIPA.
The case was filed by some Illinois residents under Illinois law, but the parties agreed to transfer the case to the California court, the court order showed.
Facebook was also hit with a lawsuit over its plan to issue new stock last month.
The company said in April it will create a new class of non-voting shares in a move aimed at letting Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg give away his wealth without relinquishing control of the social media juggernaut he founded.
Facebook was not immediately available for comment.
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-facebook-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XX08U>
Alberto
_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
Che sia invece l'Europa a far sorgere preoccupazioni sul fronte del riconoscimento facciale (dei migranti)? Segnalo quanto segue (non mi pare già passato in lista, in caso contrario mi scuso) http://punto-informatico.it/4318140/PI/News/eurodac-riconoscimento-facciale-... Fabrizio Il 11/Mag/2016 23:14, "Alberto Cammozzo" <ac+nexa@zeromx.net> ha scritto:
La legge dell'Illinois impazza:
< http://canmua.net/california/shutterfly-settles-facial-recognition-lawsuit-w...
Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation
top news Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation update daily
A lawsuit brought by an Illinois man who accused photo-sharing website Shutterfly of violating his privacy by using facial recognition software to identify his face has been settled for an undisclosed amount.
The case, which was given the go-ahead to proceed in January by a federal judge in Chicago, was being closely watched because if it had gone to trial it could have had implications for Facebook and other companies that use facial recognition software.
Illinois resident Brian Norberg alleged in the suit, which sought class-action status, that his face ended up in Shutterfly's database after a friend uploaded and tagged a photo of him in February 2015. Shutterfly measured the contours of his face and the distance between his eyes, nose and ears to create a template it used to suggest other photos of Norberg be tagged with his name, the suit said, alleging that Shutterfly had violated Norberg's rights under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act.
[...]
E Facebook si fa prudente:
Facebook announced this morning that its private photo-sharing application, Facebook Moments <http://www.momentsapp.com/>, is now available in all countries worldwide, thanks the launch of a new, modified version in the EU and Canada. While the U.S. and other international versions of the application take advantage of facial recognition technology to suggest which friends to share with by identifying who appears in your photos, the modified being launched now does away with that feature due to various privacy laws and regulations in these markets.
This makes the app a bit more labor-intensive, as it now can’t automatically identify who is in your photos – it can only suggest that a group of photos that /may/ contain the same person. [...]
< http://techcrunch.com/2016/05/10/facebook-moments-launches-in-the-eu-canada-...
Alberto
On 07/05/2016 12:27, Alberto Cammozzo wrote:
Facebook loses first round in suit over storing biometric data
Facebook Inc (FB.O <http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=FB.O>) lost the first round in a court fight against some of its users who sued the social networking company, alleging it "unlawfully" collected and stored users' biometric data derived from their faces in photographs.
The judge presiding over the case in a California federal court on Thursday turned down Facebook's motion seeking dismissal of the suit.
Facebook filed the motion arguing that the users could not file a complaint under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) as they had agreed in their user agreement that California law would govern their disputes with the company, and that BIPA does not apply to "tag suggestions."
The court found that Illinois law applies and that the plaintiffs have stated a claim under BIPA.
The complainants had alleged that Facebook's face recognition feature that suggests "tags" on photos unlawfully collected and stored biometric data, in violation of the Illinois BIPA.
The case was filed by some Illinois residents under Illinois law, but the parties agreed to transfer the case to the California court, the court order showed.
Facebook was also hit with a lawsuit over its plan to issue new stock last month.
The company said in April it will create a new class of non-voting shares in a move aimed at letting Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg give away his wealth without relinquishing control of the social media juggernaut he founded.
Facebook was not immediately available for comment.
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-facebook-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XX08U>
Alberto
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_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
Riconoscimento facciale E comportamentale... Pare solo a fini commerciali, ma il passo verso l'identificazione credo sia molto breve: http://motherboard.vice.com/read/facial-recognition-brands-mattersight [http://motherboard-images.vice.com/content-images/article/no-id/1464109460463602.png]<http://motherboard.vice.com/read/facial-recognition-brands-mattersight> Brands Want To Predict Your Behavior By Mining Your Face From YouTube Videos<http://motherboard.vice.com/read/facial-recognition-brands-mattersight> motherboard.vice.com NOPE NOPE NOPE NOPE NOPE ________________________________ Da: nexa <nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it> per conto di Fabrizio Testa <avv.fabriziotesta@gmail.com> Inviato: mercoledì 11 maggio 2016 23.39 A: Alberto Cammozzo Cc: nexa@server-nexa.polito.it Oggetto: Re: [nexa] FB facial recognition lawsuit Che sia invece l'Europa a far sorgere preoccupazioni sul fronte del riconoscimento facciale (dei migranti)? Segnalo quanto segue (non mi pare già passato in lista, in caso contrario mi scuso) http://punto-informatico.it/4318140/PI/News/eurodac-riconoscimento-facciale-... [http://punto-informatico.it/punto/20160511/11.gif]<http://punto-informatico.it/4318140/PI/News/eurodac-riconoscimento-facciale-migranti.aspx> PI: Eurodac, riconoscimento facciale per i migranti<http://punto-informatico.it/4318140/PI/News/eurodac-riconoscimento-facciale-...> punto-informatico.it Eurodac, riconoscimento facciale per i migranti. La Commissione Europea vuole estendere in maniera significativa le capacità del programma biometrico ... Fabrizio Il 11/Mag/2016 23:14, "Alberto Cammozzo" <ac+nexa@zeromx.net<mailto:ac%2Bnexa@zeromx.net>> ha scritto: La legge dell'Illinois impazza: <http://canmua.net/california/shutterfly-settles-facial-recognition-lawsuit-w...> Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation top news Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation update daily A lawsuit brought by an Illinois man who accused photo-sharing website Shutterfly of violating his privacy by using facial recognition software to identify his face has been settled for an undisclosed amount. The case, which was given the go-ahead to proceed in January by a federal judge in Chicago, was being closely watched because if it had gone to trial it could have had implications for Facebook and other companies that use facial recognition software. Illinois resident Brian Norberg alleged in the suit, which sought class-action status, that his face ended up in Shutterfly's database after a friend uploaded and tagged a photo of him in February 2015. Shutterfly measured the contours of his face and the distance between his eyes, nose and ears to create a template it used to suggest other photos of Norberg be tagged with his name, the suit said, alleging that Shutterfly had violated Norberg's rights under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act. [...] E Facebook si fa prudente: Facebook announced this morning that its private photo-sharing application, Facebook Moments <http://www.momentsapp.com/>, is now available in all countries worldwide, thanks the launch of a new, modified version in the EU and Canada. While the U.S. and other international versions of the application take advantage of facial recognition technology to suggest which friends to share with by identifying who appears in your photos, the modified being launched now does away with that feature due to various privacy laws and regulations in these markets. This makes the app a bit more labor-intensive, as it now can’t automatically identify who is in your photos – it can only suggest that a group of photos that /may/ contain the same person. [...] <http://techcrunch.com/2016/05/10/facebook-moments-launches-in-the-eu-canada-...> Alberto On 07/05/2016 12:27, Alberto Cammozzo wrote:
Facebook loses first round in suit over storing biometric data
Facebook Inc (FB.O <http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=FB.O>) lost the first round in a court fight against some of its users who sued the social networking company, alleging it "unlawfully" collected and stored users' biometric data derived from their faces in photographs.
The judge presiding over the case in a California federal court on Thursday turned down Facebook's motion seeking dismissal of the suit.
Facebook filed the motion arguing that the users could not file a complaint under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) as they had agreed in their user agreement that California law would govern their disputes with the company, and that BIPA does not apply to "tag suggestions."
The court found that Illinois law applies and that the plaintiffs have stated a claim under BIPA.
The complainants had alleged that Facebook's face recognition feature that suggests "tags" on photos unlawfully collected and stored biometric data, in violation of the Illinois BIPA.
The case was filed by some Illinois residents under Illinois law, but the parties agreed to transfer the case to the California court, the court order showed.
Facebook was also hit with a lawsuit over its plan to issue new stock last month.
The company said in April it will create a new class of non-voting shares in a move aimed at letting Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg give away his wealth without relinquishing control of the social media juggernaut he founded.
Facebook was not immediately available for comment.
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-facebook-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XX08U>
Alberto
_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it<mailto:nexa@server-nexa.polito.it> https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it<mailto:nexa@server-nexa.polito.it> https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
Che sia invece l'Europa a far sorgere preoccupazioni sul fronte del riconoscimento facciale (dei migranti)? Segnalo quanto segue (non mi pare già passato in lista, in caso contrario mi scuso) http://punto-informatico.it/4318140/PI/News/eurodac-riconoscimento-facciale-... Fabrizio ____________________________________ @ inviata da dispositivo mobile, riservata ai sensi di legge Il 11/Mag/2016 23:14, "Alberto Cammozzo" <ac+nexa@zeromx.net<mailto:ac%2Bnexa@zeromx.net>> ha scritto: La legge dell'Illinois impazza: <http://canmua.net/california/shutterfly-settles-facial-recognition-lawsuit-w...> Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation top news Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation update daily A lawsuit brought by an Illinois man who accused photo-sharing website Shutterfly of violating his privacy by using facial recognition software to identify his face has been settled for an undisclosed amount. The case, which was given the go-ahead to proceed in January by a federal judge in Chicago, was being closely watched because if it had gone to trial it could have had implications for Facebook and other companies that use facial recognition software. Illinois resident Brian Norberg alleged in the suit, which sought class-action status, that his face ended up in Shutterfly's database after a friend uploaded and tagged a photo of him in February 2015. Shutterfly measured the contours of his face and the distance between his eyes, nose and ears to create a template it used to suggest other photos of Norberg be tagged with his name, the suit said, alleging that Shutterfly had violated Norberg's rights under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act. [...] E Facebook si fa prudente: Facebook announced this morning that its private photo-sharing application, Facebook Moments <http://www.momentsapp.com/>, is now available in all countries worldwide, thanks the launch of a new, modified version in the EU and Canada. While the U.S. and other international versions of the application take advantage of facial recognition technology to suggest which friends to share with by identifying who appears in your photos, the modified being launched now does away with that feature due to various privacy laws and regulations in these markets. This makes the app a bit more labor-intensive, as it now can’t automatically identify who is in your photos – it can only suggest that a group of photos that /may/ contain the same person. [...] <http://techcrunch.com/2016/05/10/facebook-moments-launches-in-the-eu-canada-...> Alberto On 07/05/2016 12:27, Alberto Cammozzo wrote:
Facebook loses first round in suit over storing biometric data
Facebook Inc (FB.O <http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=FB.O>) lost the first round in a court fight against some of its users who sued the social networking company, alleging it "unlawfully" collected and stored users' biometric data derived from their faces in photographs.
The judge presiding over the case in a California federal court on Thursday turned down Facebook's motion seeking dismissal of the suit.
Facebook filed the motion arguing that the users could not file a complaint under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) as they had agreed in their user agreement that California law would govern their disputes with the company, and that BIPA does not apply to "tag suggestions."
The court found that Illinois law applies and that the plaintiffs have stated a claim under BIPA.
The complainants had alleged that Facebook's face recognition feature that suggests "tags" on photos unlawfully collected and stored biometric data, in violation of the Illinois BIPA.
The case was filed by some Illinois residents under Illinois law, but the parties agreed to transfer the case to the California court, the court order showed.
Facebook was also hit with a lawsuit over its plan to issue new stock last month.
The company said in April it will create a new class of non-voting shares in a move aimed at letting Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg give away his wealth without relinquishing control of the social media juggernaut he founded.
Facebook was not immediately available for comment.
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-facebook-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XX08U>
Alberto
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_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it<mailto:nexa@server-nexa.polito.it> https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
Che sia invece l'Europa a far sorgere preoccupazioni sul fronte del riconoscimento facciale (dei migranti)? Segnalo quanto segue (non mi pare già passato in lista, in caso contrario mi scuso) http://punto-informatico.it/4318140/PI/News/eurodac-riconoscimento-facciale-... Fabrizio ____________________________________ @ inviata da dispositivo mobile, riservata ai sensi di legge Il 11/Mag/2016 23:14, "Alberto Cammozzo" <ac+nexa@zeromx.net<mailto:ac%2Bnexa@zeromx.net>> ha scritto: La legge dell'Illinois impazza: <http://canmua.net/california/shutterfly-settles-facial-recognition-lawsuit-w...> Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation top news Shutterfly settles facial recognition lawsuit with man who claimed privacy violation update daily A lawsuit brought by an Illinois man who accused photo-sharing website Shutterfly of violating his privacy by using facial recognition software to identify his face has been settled for an undisclosed amount. The case, which was given the go-ahead to proceed in January by a federal judge in Chicago, was being closely watched because if it had gone to trial it could have had implications for Facebook and other companies that use facial recognition software. Illinois resident Brian Norberg alleged in the suit, which sought class-action status, that his face ended up in Shutterfly's database after a friend uploaded and tagged a photo of him in February 2015. Shutterfly measured the contours of his face and the distance between his eyes, nose and ears to create a template it used to suggest other photos of Norberg be tagged with his name, the suit said, alleging that Shutterfly had violated Norberg's rights under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act. [...] E Facebook si fa prudente: Facebook announced this morning that its private photo-sharing application, Facebook Moments <http://www.momentsapp.com/>, is now available in all countries worldwide, thanks the launch of a new, modified version in the EU and Canada. While the U.S. and other international versions of the application take advantage of facial recognition technology to suggest which friends to share with by identifying who appears in your photos, the modified being launched now does away with that feature due to various privacy laws and regulations in these markets. This makes the app a bit more labor-intensive, as it now can’t automatically identify who is in your photos – it can only suggest that a group of photos that /may/ contain the same person. [...] <http://techcrunch.com/2016/05/10/facebook-moments-launches-in-the-eu-canada-...> Alberto On 07/05/2016 12:27, Alberto Cammozzo wrote:
Facebook loses first round in suit over storing biometric data
Facebook Inc (FB.O <http://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=FB.O>) lost the first round in a court fight against some of its users who sued the social networking company, alleging it "unlawfully" collected and stored users' biometric data derived from their faces in photographs.
The judge presiding over the case in a California federal court on Thursday turned down Facebook's motion seeking dismissal of the suit.
Facebook filed the motion arguing that the users could not file a complaint under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) as they had agreed in their user agreement that California law would govern their disputes with the company, and that BIPA does not apply to "tag suggestions."
The court found that Illinois law applies and that the plaintiffs have stated a claim under BIPA.
The complainants had alleged that Facebook's face recognition feature that suggests "tags" on photos unlawfully collected and stored biometric data, in violation of the Illinois BIPA.
The case was filed by some Illinois residents under Illinois law, but the parties agreed to transfer the case to the California court, the court order showed.
Facebook was also hit with a lawsuit over its plan to issue new stock last month.
The company said in April it will create a new class of non-voting shares in a move aimed at letting Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg give away his wealth without relinquishing control of the social media juggernaut he founded.
Facebook was not immediately available for comment.
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-facebook-lawsuit-idUSKCN0XX08U>
Alberto
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_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it<mailto:nexa@server-nexa.polito.it> https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
The search giant says it should not have to comply with the Illinois law An Illinois law regulating "faceprints" is unconstitutional, Google argues in a court filing. The law requires companies to obtain written releases from individuals before collecting their biometric data, including facial scans. "Illinois legislators cannot decide policy for the rest of the world," Google says in a motion filed last week with U.S. District Court Judge Edmond Chang in Illinois. The search giant says it can't be expected to know which people in its database are from Illinois. At issue is the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act <http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=3004&ChapterID=57>, passed in 2008. Besides requiring companies to get permission before making facial scans, it also requires them to notify people about the practice in advance and to publish a schedule for destroying the information if permission is not granted. The filing came after Illinois resident Lindabeth Rivera filed a potential class action lawsuit charging that Google Photos unlawfully stores millions of faceprints of Illinoisians. [...] <https://www.consumeraffairs.com/news/google-challenges-law-regulating-facial...>
participants (5)
-
Alberto Cammozzo -
Andrea Glorioso -
Fabrizio Testa -
Fabrizio Testa -
L P