this post was submitted on 03 May 2025
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Privacy
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Your face is not public data, you are just wrong. Stop.
Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA)
Citation: 740 ILCS 14
Key Points:
Prohibits private entities from collecting, storing, or using biometric identifiers (including face scans) without informed written consent.
Includes the right to sue for violations (statutory damages of $1,000–$5,000 per incident).
Relevant Cases:
Facebook settled a $650 million class-action lawsuit in 2020 for violating BIPA via its facial recognition feature.
Your face is not public data, there are literal court cases showing this. A simple Google search would show you this. Sit down and stop spreading misinformation.
I can walk up to you in a public space and take your photo and you cant do shit about it as long as i don't use it in specific ways. Its public data.
Public data does not mean the data can be used in any manner. It means its available to anyone in the public space.
There are literal court cases about this. Finally the government isnt a private entity, so none of your cases/law examples apply to this situation.
Look up any case about someone being pissed their photo was used for a news piece or journalism or artwork.
If you walk into a public space and that public space has cameras with facial recognition software, congratulations! Your face can and will be scanned!
And nothing about that act violates the laws you referenced for the government or any other protected use, such as say journalism.
What are you arguing about, did the law confuse you? It's pretty clear.
Clearly its not since you dont understand it. The law doesn't prevent you from being filmed or it being stored. If it did security cameras wouldn't exist for example. Nor does it apply to governmental agencies.
Feel free to enter any private business with security cameras and you'll discover they have a wonderful sign on the door informing you of this fact