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Judge Tosses Biometric Data Suit Against X

X's child porn detection system doesn’t violate an Illinois biometric privacy law, the judge ruled.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 6.19.2024 11:30 AM

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phone scanning man | DRAWLAB/Newscom
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A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit concerning the software X (formerly Twitter) uses to find illegal porn images. The suit was brought by Mark Martell, who objected to X using Microsoft's PhotoDNA software.

Martell argued that PhotoDNA—which is used across the tech industry to detect and report child porn—required the collection of biometric data and that this collection violated Illinois' Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA).

A win for Martell could have imperiled the use of PhotoDNA and similar software by all sorts of tech companies, thwarting tools that have proved useful in fighting sexually explicit images of minors, non-consensual adult pornography (a.k.a. "revenge porn"), terroristic images, and extremely violent content. Tech companies voluntarily employ these tools in a way that seems minimally invasive to the privacy of your average user—no biometric data collection actually required.

So, while "dude loses biometric privacy suit against big tech" may seem on its surface like a sad story, it's probably good news that U.S. District Judge Sunil R. Harjani granted X's motion to dismiss the case.

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PhotoDNA 'cannot be used to identify a person'

"An Illinois federal judge has thrown out a proposed class action accusing X Corp. of violating the state's biometric privacy law through its use of software to police pornographic images," Law360 explains. Reading that summary, I'll admit, I was prepared to be outraged about the decision. But upon closer examination, the ruling seems like a good one.

This is not actually a case about X using biometric data, nor about X using it to police sex workers or adult sexuality.

Martell's objections center on the use of hashes, which function as a sort of secret signature attached to digital photos. Using PhotoDNA, X assigns hashes to newly uploaded photos and compares these to hashes in an existing database.

Hashes can be a powerful tool in fighting known objectionable content, helping platforms identify such content and prevent it from being reposted endlessly. Using a database of known (illegal or objectionable) images that have already been assigned hashes, tech companies can easily compare newly uploaded images against this database and flag them for further review.

Of course, any tools used to moderate bad stuff must be weighed against their potential to cross privacy lines. If X was using PhotoDNA to do facial recognition on all posted images (or all potentially explicit images), that would be cause for concern.

But it doesn't seem that's what the PhotoDNA software does.

"PhotoDNA is not facial recognition software and cannot be used to identify a person or object in an image," according to Microsoft.

Illinois Biometric Act Explicitly Excludes Photos

In his complaint, Martell argued that the hash creation process necessarily involved facial scans. But Martell "did not allege facts indicating that the hash is a scan of face geometry, as opposed to merely a record of the photo," Harjani wrote.

I might be missing something, but the method employed here doesn't seem particularly worrying from a privacy perspective.

Nor does it fall within the confines of the Illinois BIPA.

BIPA applies when biometric identifiers are used to identify individuals and defines "biometric identifier" as "a retina or iris scan, fingerprint, voiceprint, or scan of hand or face geometry." The law—which explicitly excludes photos from the definition of biometric identifiers—requires companies to provide written notice and receive explicit consent before collecting "an individual's biometric identifier used to identify an individual."

"Allegations that a photo was scanned are insufficient to plausibly allege that PhotoDNA creates a scan of an individual's face geometry under BIPA," writes Judge Harjani in his decision. "He failed to allege that any type of facial scan occurs during the hash creation process. Without that, there can be no scan of face geometry which could be used to identify an individual, as is required to be considered a biometric identifier under BIPA."

The judge left Martell open to file an amended complaint if possible.

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The new Netflix Houses — to open next year in King of Prussia, Pa. and Dallas — will feature a wide array of shopping, eateries and experiential activities tied… pic.twitter.com/DRGvr2Pe0t

— Variety (@Variety) June 18, 2024

• D.M. Bennett, publisher of The Truth Seeker, was convicted in 1879 of violating the Comstock Act by publishing an Ezra Heywood critique of marriage. The Comstock Act is a Victorian-era law that prophets mailing "obscene, lewd, or lascivious" material, and some conservatives want to revive it today to go after abortion pills. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) has launched a campaign to get the Biden administration to posthumously pardon Bennett and "also to put the administration on record in opposing the resurgence of this law that threatens the rights of all Americans," writes FIRE lawyer Robert Corn-Revere.

• "What the public needs to understand" about the Supreme Court's mifepristone ruling last week "is that this is a procedural ruling and not a proclamation that the distribution of mifepristone is lawful or that birth control is protected by the Constitution," said University of Colorado Law School professor Aya Gruber (author of the very excellent book The Feminist War on Crime). "Plaintiffs with standing may lodge the same challenge that the [U.S. Food and Drug Administration] lacked authority to approve mifepristone. Additionally, pro-life groups are dusting off an 1800s obscenity law, the 'Comstock Act,' to argue for a national ban on abortion and 'abortifacient' drugs, equipment, and even information. This fight is far from over."

• Law professor Nadine Strossen will be chatting with the Woodhull Freedom Foundation's Ricci Levy about free speech tomorrow at 1 p.m., in a talk you can watch online. (Read my interview with Strossen earlier this year here and here.)

• "California lawmakers are debating an ill-advised bill that would require internet users to show their ID in order to look at sexually explicit content," notes the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is trying to rally opposition to the measure (Assembly Bill 3080).

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NEXT: A Florida Man Was Arrested for Filming Marion County Sheriff's Deputies. Now He's Suing.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

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  1. Yuno Hoo   11 months ago

    "California lawmakers are debating an ill-advised bill that would require internet users to show their ID in order to look at sexually explicit content,"

    "or to vote."

    1. Don't look at me!   11 months ago

      No, no, no. Voter ID is raysis.

    2. Vernon Depner   11 months ago

      Why would people be hesitant to hand over their personal information to the fine, ethically upright businessmen in the porn industry?

  2. DuaneMaxwell-HillWozniel   11 months ago

    What the hell is X? Is it the same X as the first one mentioned in the article? Are all the other Xs the same as that first one too? People are too dumb to know what you mean unless you write, formerly twitter, so I’m just completely fucking lost with the headline, lede and rest of the article.

    1. MatthewSlyfield   11 months ago

      "What the hell is X?"

      The company formerly known as Twitter.

      1. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   11 months ago

        And the guys that work there are the X-Men.

    2. Vernon Depner   11 months ago

      Musk should change the name to Fuck.

  3. Rick James   11 months ago

    Netflix has announced the first two cities for its gigantic new in-person experience venues, slated to open in 2025.

    The new Netflix Houses — to open next year in King of Prussia, Pa. and Dallas — will feature a wide array of shopping, eateries and experiential activities tied to the streamer’s major franchises like “Bridgerton,” “Stranger Things” and “Squid Game.”

    Wait... the company that was singularly responsible for wiping out a major brick and mortar business model wants to bring back the shopping mall?

    1. Don't look at me!   11 months ago

      It will be different this time!

    2. Social Justice is neither   11 months ago

      Even those series, what is the point of this? I couldn't see early access being a big thing and none are huge FX or action spectacles that are better on the big screen. Is this just an excuse to get into real estate?

  4. Gaear Grimsrud   11 months ago

    In other news from the once great state of Illinois,
    "Sloppy J.B. Pritzker, the Rotund Governor from the once great State of Illinois, who makes Chris Christie look like a male model, and whose family wanted him out of the business because he was so pathetic at helping them run it, has presided over the destruction and disintegration of Illinois at levels never seen before in any State. Crime is rampant and people are, sadly, fleeing Illinois. Unless a change is made at the Governor’s level, Illinois can never be Great Again!"
    https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/posts/112626680945709862

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   11 months ago

      MILGA!

      1. kevrob   11 months ago

        Make Illinois Georgia?

        1. Gaear Grimsrud   11 months ago

          As an IL resident just let me say I wish it could be a lot more like GA.

          1. Gaear Grimsrud   11 months ago

            Let me revise that to say GA outside of Fulton County. Actually watching Phil Holloway, Inside The Law on YouTube covering Fani's Young Thug RICO trial. If you thought the Merchan trial was bad, this shit is even worse.

    2. Fire up the Woodchippers! (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   11 months ago

      On the plus side, this may eventually bring down the Illinois Democrat machine. Gruesome Newsome certainly isn’t doing the democrats any favors in California either.

      Their constituents are idiots, divorced from reality. But every delusion has a breaking point.

    3. Vernon Depner   11 months ago

      It's not all of Illinois that's a shithole—just the Chicago area and certain blighted places in the Ohio Valley. It's a good illustration of why the Red State/Blue State stuff isn't reality. The divide in this country is Big Cities/rural and small towns. It doesn't follow state lines, or even county lines.

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   11 months ago

        True but all of us downstaters are stuck with the shit they serve up in Chicago and Springfield.

        1. Vernon Depner   11 months ago

          That's why we need secession. The two Americas can't peacefully coexist as part of one polity.

  5. Social Justice is neither   11 months ago

    So this biometric information requirement is good but the same thing for other reasons that you disagree with is an absolute violation of your rights, got it. Fuck off you disingenuous twat.

  6. mad.casual   11 months ago

    So, while "dude loses biometric privacy suit against big tech" may seem on its surface like a sad story, it's probably good news that U.S. District Judge Sunil R. Harjani granted X's motion to dismiss the case.

    Wait, wait, wait... you mean judges can just dismiss cases and we don't, in fact, need Congress to infringe on freedom of speech by passing a law to protect Good Samaritan blocking and screening of offensive material?

    Fucking LOL you stupid cunt:

    At the outset, Defendant cited no case law where a court held the CDA preempted a BIPA claim and the Court found none. Defendant further asserts that it is entitled to immunity under §230(c)(2)(A) because it is a provider of an interactive computer service that acted voluntarily in good faith to restrict access to explicit images. Immunity under § 230(c)(2) is an affirmative defense so the Defendant bears the burden of proof. As CDA immunity frequently turns on facts not before the court at the pleading stage, dismissal is only appropriate when a plaintiff pleads themselves out of court. Bonilla v. Ancestry.com Operations Inc., 574 F. Supp. 3d 582, 592 (N.D. Ill. 2021); see Hyson USA, Inc. v. Hyson 2U, Ltd., 821 F.3d 935, 939 (7th Cir. 2016). Here, Plaintiff has not pled himself out of court. Taking the allegations in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, the Complaint does not allege that X acted in good faith, as required for immunity under §230(c)(2). As such, Defendant is not entitled to immunity at this time.

  7. mad.casual   11 months ago

    Everybody else is as ecstatic as I am to hear than an Individual Rights and Expression organization is pressuring the Biden Administration to take a stance (because apparently they've been too middling until now) on abortion, an act that is neither expressive or individual, right?!

    Next up: FIRE defends the individual right of drag queens to read suggestive literature to children at public libraries.

  8. Stuck in California   11 months ago

    a Victorian-era law that prophets mailing "obscene, lewd, or lascivious" material,

    What does it mean when a law prophets something? I'm confused, having trouble parsing this sentence.

    1. mad.casual   11 months ago

      Pretty sure auto-correct ground up a typo of "prohibits" and spit out "prophets", but you're reading The Feminist (libertarian) Senior Editor of Reason Magazine so, you'll get chaotic evil 'zero fucks given' writing and like it.

      1. Stuck in California   11 months ago

        I actually think it's mote than zero fucks with her. I think she actively hates most of us. Just the impression I get.

        That said, what the fuck? Doesn't anyone read this shit before it is published? There're like 30 "editors" on staff. Nobody is doing any editing?

        Honestly not sure why she's writing a links. She lost her job to Liz, who actually puts effort into it and does it way better. She's not going to build any sort of following doing the same thing, but with more whores.

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