AI公司在FTC调查后删除OKCupid用户照片及数据


2026-04-20 21:02:46 UTC / 路透社
作者:乔迪·戈多伊
2026年4月20日 美国东部时间21:02 更新,距发稿已过去2小时

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2024年11月24日,美国华盛顿特区联邦贸易委员会(FTC)总部的标识。路透社/伯努瓦·泰西耶/资料图片

  • 该公司称已删除2014年获取的数据
  • 民主党议员呼吁删除相关模型
  • AI在美国大选前成为政治热点话题

(路透社4月20日电)人工智能公司克拉里菲(Clarifai)本月表示,在美国联邦贸易委员会就隐私违规问题与约会网站OKCupid达成和解后,该公司已删除300万张OKCupid用户照片以及基于这些照片训练的面部识别模型。

OKCupid于3月底与FTC达成和解,该公司2014年曾向克拉里菲提供照片和人口统计数据用于训练其面部识别模型,但和解协议遭到部分民主党人士批评,他们认为处罚力度不足。

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这一事件反映出,在美国国会选举前夕,人工智能已成为政治热点话题,唐纳德·特朗普政府正致力于推动美国在该行业占据主导地位。

据路透社看到的一份文件显示,克拉里菲已于4月7日向FTC证实其已删除相关数据。

公司删除模型与数据

马萨诸塞州民主党众议员洛里·特兰的办公室表示,该公司还在4月16日告知特兰的办公室,其已删除所有基于该数据训练的模型,且未将数据共享给第三方。

这位来自马萨诸塞州的民主党人称,这一确认“是朝着正确方向迈出的一步”,但同时表示“联邦贸易委员会一开始就本不该接受如此宽松的和解条件”。

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“人工智能公司的不当行为绝不应被忽视或不予追究,我将继续填补本届党派性FTC留下的监管空白,确保美国人的隐私与安全置于首位,”特兰在一份声明中说道。

不过FTC发言人乔·西蒙森表示:“这完全是无稽之谈,是靠说谎谋生的民主党人编造出来的问题。”

FTC无权就该案中指控的违规行为处以罚款。克拉里菲是从OKCupid处申请获取数据的,并未被指控存在任何不当行为。

克拉里菲未回应置评请求,无法说明被删除的模型数量以及这些模型被使用了多久。

面部识别数据

据其官网介绍,这家总部位于特拉华州的公司提供面部识别技术,可识别图像和视频中的个人,并能分析年龄、种族和性别。该公司曾与美国军方签订合同,还获得了英伟达等公司的投资。

法庭文件显示,2014年克拉里菲创始人寻求获取这些数据时,当时OKCupid的部分高管还是克拉里菲的投资者。

“我们目前正在收集数据,刚刚意识到OKCupid一定拥有海量的优质相关数据,”克拉里菲创始人马修·蔡勒在发给OKCupid联合创始人马克斯韦尔·克朗的邮件中写道。

FTC表示,此次数据传输违反了OKCupid的隐私政策以及一项禁止欺诈性商业行为的联邦法律。根据和解协议,OKCupid以及运营Tinder等其他在线约会平台的Match集团同意,不会对其隐私政策作出虚假陈述。

该机构是在2019年《纽约时报》的一篇报道后启动调查的,当时正值特朗普首届政府任期内。

乔迪·戈多伊在纽约报道;马修·刘易斯编辑

本社报道遵循路透社信托原则。

AI company deleted OKCupid user photos, data after FTC scrutiny

2026-04-20 21:02:46 UTC / Reuters

By Jody Godoy

April 20, 2026 9:02 PM UTC Updated 2 hours ago

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A view of signage at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 24, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo

  • Company said it deleted data obtained in 2014
  • Democratic lawmaker called for models’ deletion
  • AI a political flashpoint in the U.S. ahead of elections

April 20 (Reuters) – Artificial intelligence company Clarifai said this month it had deleted 3 million OkCupid ​user photos and facial-recognition models trained on them after the U.S. Federal Trade Commission settled with ​the dating site over privacy violations.

OkCupid settled with the FTC in late March for providing photos and demographic data to train Clarifai’s facial-recognition models in 2014, but the settlement drew criticism from some Democrats who alleged it did not go far enough.

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The incident reflects ​how AI has become a political flashpoint ahead of U.S. congressional elections, as President Donald Trump’s administration ​seeks to promote American dominance in the industry.

Clarifai certified to the FTC on April 7 ⁠that it had deleted the data, according to a document seen by Reuters.

COMPANY DELETES MODELS AND DATA

The company ​also told the office of U.S. Representative Lori Trahan on April 16 that it had deleted any models trained on ​the data and had not shared the data with third parties, her office said.

The Democrat from Massachusetts called the confirmation “a step in the right direction,” but said “the FTC should have never settled for less in the first place.”

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“Misconduct by AI companies should never go ​unnoticed or unanswered, and I’ll continue plugging gaps left by this partisan FTC to ensure Americans’ privacy and safety ​comes first,” Trahan said in a statement.

However, FTC spokesperson Joe Simonson said: “This is a completely baseless issue manufactured by Democrats who ‌do nothing ⁠but lie for a living.”

The FTC does not have authority to issue penalties for the violations alleged in the case. Clarifai, which received the data after requesting it from OkCupid, was not accused of any wrongdoing.

Clarifai did not respond to requests for comment on how many models were deleted or how long they were in use.

FACIAL-RECOGNITION DATA

The Delaware-based ​company offers facial-recognition technology that ​identifies individuals in images ⁠and video, and can analyze age, race and gender, according to its website. The company has contracted with the U.S. military, and has received investments from Nvidia and others.

Clarifai’s ​founder sought the data in 2014, when some OkCupid executives were Clarifai investors, according ​to court documents.

“We’re ⁠collecting data now and just realized that OKCupid must have a HUGE amount of awesome data for this,” Clarifai founder Matthew Zeiler wrote in an email to OkCupid co-founder Maxwell Krohn.

The data transfer breached OkCupid’s privacy policy and a federal ⁠law against ​deceptive business practices, the FTC said. OkCupid and Match Group, which ​runs Tinder and other online dating platforms, agreed not to misrepresent their privacy policies under the settlement.

The agency opened the probe after a New ​York Times article in 2019, during the first Trump administration.

Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York; Editing by Matthew Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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