Monday, March 31, 2025

Can Trump Use Economic Warfare to America’s Advantage? | Amanpour and Co...

WORLD NEWSPAPERS PAGE ONES

 
 
The Chronicle (UK) The Arizona Republic
 
 South China Morning Post
 Il Foglio Quotidiano
 
Le Temps
 

Musk: 2.1 Million ‘Non-Citizens’ Received Social Security Numbers in 2024

 Elon Musk Claims 2.1 Million ‘Non-Citizens’ Received Social Security Numbers in 2024 

Elon Musk Claims 2.1 Million 'Non-Citizens' Received SS Numbers in 2024

CRITICAL FROM A MARKET STANDPOINT --- ‘Liberation Day’ Not a Clearing Event, Says Morgan Stanley’s Wilson

Something has gone deeply wrong....TechDirt Reports from Mike Masnick and Tim Cushing

These aren’t just embarrassing gaffes or fodder for tech journalists. 
They’re potentially devastating vulnerabilities in our national security apparatus, created by the very people tasked with protecting it. 
When your National Security Advisor and Director of National Intelligence are ignoring basic security practices that every corporate IT department requires of entry-level employees, something has gone deeply wrong with your hiring practices.
Doctor Who
 Clearview AI: We Are 'Working to Acquire All U.S. Mugshots' From Past 15  Years | by Dave Gershgorn | OneZero

Not Content With Its Billions Of Web Scrapings, Clearview Tried To Buy Millions Of Mugshots And SSNs

from the everything-everywhere-all-at-once dept

Clearview saw an opening in the facial recognition market and took full advantage of it. While most tech firms offered face-matching tech of dubious accuracy, Clearview went further, matching its AI to the billions of records it has harvested for free from the open internet. (And while this effort certainly wasn’t free, it definitely was cheaper than hiring a third party to do its web scraping for it.)

Not satisfied with its 10 billion+ stack of scraped photos and personal data, Clearview turned to other companies to help it continue to build a database none of its competitors would be able to compete with. (Not that any of them wanted to compete with Clearview. In fact, other facial recognition tech companies have taken care to distance themselves from Clearview and its web scraping-based business model.)

As Freddy Martinez reports for 404 Media, newly obtained documents show Clearview was willing to spend some of its own money to obtain (or at least access) more than a billion additional data points from a third party “intelligence firm.”

New documents obtained by 404 Media reveal that Clearview AI spent nearly a million dollars in a bid to purchase “690 million arrest records and 390 million arrest photos” from all 50 states from an intelligence firm. The contract further describes the records as including current and former home addresses, dates of birth, arrest photos, social security and cell phone numbers, and email addresses. Clearview attempted to purchase this data from Investigative Consultant, Inc. (ICI) which billed itself as an intelligence company with access to tens of thousands of databases and the ability to create unique data streams for its clients. The contract was signed in mid-2019, at a time when Clearview AI was quietly collecting billions of photos off the internet and was relatively unknown at the time. 

As the report notes, this happened before Clearview began racking up negative headlines all over the world, thanks mostly to Kashmir Hill’s expose of the company and it tactics (and its miserable set of financial backers) for the New York Times. This was prior to the numerous lawsuits, fines, fees, and expulsions from foreign countries that initial reporting led to.

That also means this happened back when Clearview still had money to spend. At this point, Clearview still has tens of billions of data points and an unknown number of paying customers, but it hardly seems like a tech firm that’s likely to survive much longer now that its largest revenue stream is considered so toxic most potential customers are look at other options. In fact, Clearview is so cash poor it has been trying to hand out stock options instead of actual money in lawsuit settlements.

Clearview — especially as portrayed by its founder, Hoan Ton-That — depicts itself as the fastest mover in the breaking things tech market, a company so smart and self-assured that it can’t possibly be overtaken by its competitors and/or forced out of the market by the numerous laws around the world that make its data collection efforts illegal.

But the evidence shows Clearview isn’t all that smart, actually. This contract fell through and both parties sued each other for breach of contract. This ended up being one of the rare cases where Clearview came out ahead in litigation. But if it had any hope of clawing back the ~$1 million it paid to ICI, those hopes were extinguished more than five years ago when Clearview first entered this contract.

Clearview AI may also never recover the over one million dollars from ICI or its president: instead of wiring the money to an escrow service, Clearview instead deposited it directly into Berlin’s personal checking account. 

Nice. This makes Clearview look like someone’s grandparent. Maybe Clearview was told things would move faster if it just cut a check to cash and sent it to ICI’s owner directly. Or maybe ICI managed to nullify the contractual prenup by convincing Clearview no escrow would be necessary. Either way, Clearview got played and the money it wants back from the company was never paid directly to this data broker/”intelligence firm.” Instead, it went directly into the pocket of the company’s president (Donald Berlin) who may not have any legal, much less moral, compunction to return the funds.

This feels like another mileage marker on the road to Clearview’s ultimate exit from the marketplace of… um… marketplaces. At this point, it’s just limping along, selling access to entities that don’t mind doing business with a business on the precipice of bankruptcy and don’t really care where the data come from or the accuracy of the algorithm used to generate matches. And while I sincerely continue to cheer on what looks like a slow-moving demise of a truly terrible AI firm, I’m not so optimistic some other tech bro with even worse ideas won’t buy what’s left of this mess for pennies on the dollar and turn into something far worse than what it already is.

Filed Under: , , ,
Companies: clearview, clearview ai, investigative consultant inc.

 
Clearview AI: We Are 'Working to Acquire All U.S. Mugshots' From Past 15  Years | by Dave Gershgorn | OneZero

Not Content With Its Billions Of Web Scrapings, Clearview Tried To Buy  Millions Of Mugshots And SSNs | Techdirt

Sunday, March 30, 2025

Trump says he is "very angry" with Putin for questioning Zelenskyy's legitamacy....

NYT report confirms Pentagon’s ‘open secret’ role in Ukrainian ops

The administration of US President Joe Biden was far more deeply involved in backing Ukraine’s fight against Russia than previously acknowledged, a New York Times investigation has claimed, stressing that Washington’s intelligence was indispensable for Kiev's military operations.
The lengthy report released on Saturday offers a deep dive into an “extraordinary partnership of intelligence, strategy, planning and technology” that became Kiev’s “secret weapon” in countering Russia.
While the Pentagon supplied Ukraine with tens of billions of dollars in military aid, it also provided crucial intelligence that enabled Kiev to attack Russian command and control centers and other high-value targets starting in mid-2022, the NYT said.
Ivan Katchanovski (@I_Katchanovski) / X
NYT report confirms Pentagon’s ‘open secret’ role in Ukrainian ops – expert

NYT report confirms Pentagon’s ‘open secret’ role in Ukrainian ops – expert

It has long been evident that the US military served as the “the eyes, ears, and brain” behind any significant actions by Kiev, Sergey Poletaev told RT 

“It has long been clear that the Americans sought to fight Russia with the hands of Ukraine and that the main contribution they make is intelligence and supply of some kind of strike systems, for which they, in turn, provide intelligence,” he told RT on Sunday.

“It was no secret that the eyes and ears and brain behind any serious Ukrainian actions were the Pentagon. Here you go, all this has just been confirmed,” the analyst said.

READ MORE: Intel sharing and ‘boots on the ground’: Takeaways from NYT investigation into ‘secret’ US-Ukraine partnership

The investigation, however, “is useful” since it “shows the train of thought of the American side.” At some point, Poletaev said, the US realized they couldn’t fully control Ukraine’s actions.

“They understood that the puppet they had on their hand was not entirely controllable. The puppet behaved as it saw fit,” he explained. 
  • The analyst emphasized that this dynamic is crucial for understanding the conflict’s progression and is indicative of situations “when the tail begins to wag the dog.” 
Poletaev described the Ukraine conflict as a classic proxy war, reminiscent of those during the Cold War era. In that respect, he noted that it’s interesting that the NYT described it as “a rematch” for US-Russia proxy wars in Vietnam, Afghanistan and Syria.
  • According to the analyst, the findings are unlikely to have any impact on the talks between Moscow and Washington on settling the conflict.
 
  1. The NYT investigation was based on over 300 interviews with current and former policymakers, Pentagon officials, intelligence officers, and military personnel in Ukraine, the US, Britain, and other European countries. 
  2. It details the cooperation between Washington and Kiev from the early days of the conflict through late 2024.
 
The Post's View - The Washington Post

Cartoon Carousel The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics | By POLITICO STAFF 01/23/2026 05:00 AM EST

Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the fo...