
Your Face Belongs to Us
A Secretive Startup's Quest to End Privacy as We Know It
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Narrated by:
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Kashmir Hill
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By:
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Kashmir Hill
About this listen
NATIONAL BESTSELLER • The story of a small AI company that gave facial recognition to law enforcement, billionaires, and businesses, threatening to end privacy as we know it
“The dystopian future portrayed in some science-fiction movies is already upon us. Kashmir Hill’s fascinating book brings home the scary implications of this new reality.”—John Carreyrou, author of Bad Blood
A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: Financial Times, Los Angeles Times, Wired
Winner of the Inc. Non-Obvious Book Award • Longlisted for the Financial Times and Schroders Business Book of the Year Award
New York Times tech reporter Kashmir Hill was skeptical when she got a tip about a mysterious app called Clearview AI that claimed it could, with 99 percent accuracy, identify anyone based on just one snapshot of their face. The app could supposedly scan a face and, in just seconds, surface every detail of a person’s online life: their name, social media profiles, friends and family members, home address, and photos that they might not have even known existed. If it was everything it claimed to be, it would be the ultimate surveillance tool, and it would open the door to everything from stalking to totalitarian state control. Could it be true?
In this riveting account, Hill tracks the improbable rise of Clearview AI, helmed by Hoan Ton-That, an Australian computer engineer, and Richard Schwartz, a former Rudy Giuliani advisor, and its astounding collection of billions of faces from the internet. The company was boosted by a cast of controversial characters, including conservative provocateur Charles C. Johnson and billionaire Donald Trump backer Peter Thiel—who all seemed eager to release this society-altering technology on the public. Google and Facebook decided that a tool to identify strangers was too radical to release, but Clearview forged ahead, sharing the app with private investors, pitching it to businesses, and offering it to thousands of law enforcement agencies around the world.
Facial recognition technology has been quietly growing more powerful for decades. This technology has already been used in wrongful arrests in the United States. Unregulated, it could expand the reach of policing, as it has in China and Russia, to a terrifying, dystopian level.
Your Face Belongs to Us is a gripping true story about the rise of a technological superpower and an urgent warning that, in the absence of vigilance and government regulation, Clearview AI is one of many new technologies that challenge what Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis once called “the right to be let alone.”
©2023 Kashmir Hill (P)2023 Random House AudioListeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
“As I read Your Face Belongs to Us, it dawned on me that the dystopian future portrayed in some science-fiction movies is already upon us. Whether you like it or not, your face has already been scraped from the internet, stored in a giant database, and made available to law enforcement agencies, private corporations, and authoritarian governments to track and surveil you. Kashmir Hill’s fascinating book brings home the scary implications of this new reality.”—John Carreyrou, author of Bad Blood
“Kashmir Hill all but invented the tech dystopia beat, and no one is a more exuberant and enjoyable guide to the dark corners of our possible future than she is. Reaching deep into the past to paint a terrifying portrait of our future, Hill’s thorough, awe-inspiring reporting and compelling storytelling paint a fascinating tale of tech’s next chapter. This is the most fun you can have reading a real-life nightmare.”—Garrett Graff, author of The Only Plane in the Sky
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For the past five years—ever since a chance encounter at a dinner party—journalist Byron Tau has been piecing together a secret story: how the whole of the internet and every digital device in the world became a mechanism of intelligence, surveillance, and monitoring.
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Political biased for absolutely no reason
- By Red on 09-28-24
By: Byron Tau
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Code Dependent
- Living in the Shadow of AI
- By: Madhumita Murgia
- Narrated by: Madhumita Murgia
- Length: 9 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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On the surface, a British poet, an UberEats courier in Pittsburgh, an Indian doctor, and a Chinese activist in exile have nothing in common. But they are in fact linked by a profound common experience—unexpected encounters with artificial intelligence. In Code Dependent, Murgia shows how automated systems are reshaping our lives all over the world, from technology that marks children as future criminals, to an app that is helping to give diagnoses to a remote tribal community.
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very left wing
- By Terry lillo on 10-21-24
By: Madhumita Murgia
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All in Her Head
- The Truth and Lies Early Medicine Taught Us About Women’s Bodies and Why It Matters Today
- By: Elizabeth Comen
- Narrated by: Anna Caputo
- Length: 13 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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For as long as medicine has been a practice, women's bodies have been treated like objects to be practiced on: examined and ignored, idealized and sexualized, shamed, subjugated, mutilated, and dismissed. The history of women’s healthcare is a story in which women themselves have too often been voiceless—a narrative instead written from the perspective of men who styled themselves as authorities on the female of the species, yet uninformed by women’s own voices, thoughts, fears, pain and experiences.
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Historical and hopeful
- By Meghan Hurley on 10-26-24
By: Elizabeth Comen
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Dark Wire
- The Incredible True Story of the Largest Sting Operation Ever
- By: Joseph Cox
- Narrated by: Peter Ganim
- Length: 11 hrs and 40 mins
- Unabridged
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Beginning in 2018, a powerful app for secure communications, called Anom, began to take root among drug dealers and other criminals. It had extraordinary safeguards to keep out prying eyes--the power to quickly wipe data, voice-masking technology, and more. It was better than other apps popular among organized crime syndicates, except for one thing: it was secretly run by law enforcement. Over the next few years, the FBI, along with law enforcement partners in Australia and parts of Europe, got a front row seat to the global criminal underworld.
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Amazing story
- By Katie W. on 06-08-24
By: Joseph Cox
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The Age of Surveillance Capitalism
- The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power
- By: Shoshana Zuboff
- Narrated by: Nicol Zanzarella
- Length: 24 hrs and 16 mins
- Unabridged
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The Age of Surveillance Capitalism is neither a hand-wringing narrative of danger and decline nor a digital fairy tale. Rather, it offers a deeply reasoned and evocative examination of the contests over the next chapter of capitalism that will decide the meaning of information civilization in the 21st century. The stark issue at hand is whether we will be the masters of information and machines or its slaves.
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Book Editors failed to trim the word count
- By Todd B on 07-14-19
By: Shoshana Zuboff
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The Achilles Trap
- Saddam Hussein, the C.I.A., and the Origins of America's Invasion of Iraq
- By: Steve Coll
- Narrated by: Malcolm Hillgartner
- Length: 17 hrs and 58 mins
- Unabridged
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When the United States invaded Iraq in 2003, its message was clear: Iraq, under the control of strongman Saddam Hussein, possessed weapons of mass destruction that, if left unchecked, posed grave danger to the world. But when no WMDs were found, the United States and its allies were forced to examine the political and intelligence failures that had led to the invasion and the occupation, and the civil war that followed. One integral question has remained unsolved.
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From the Saddam’s Point of View.
- By philip on 03-08-24
By: Steve Coll
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Legacy
- A Black Physician Reckons with Racism in Medicine
- By: Uché Blackstock MD
- Narrated by: Uché Blackstock MD
- Length: 8 hrs and 6 mins
- Unabridged
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Growing up in Brooklyn, New York, it never occurred to Uché Blackstock and her twin sister, Oni, that they would be anything but physicians. In the 1980s, their mother headed an organization of Black women physicians, and for years the girls watched these fiercely intelligent women in white coats tend to their patients and neighbors, host community health fairs, cure ills, and save lives.
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I Feel Validated!
- By Lisa M Walker on 07-13-24
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Doppelganger
- A Trip into the Mirror World
- By: Naomi Klein
- Narrated by: Naomi Klein
- Length: 14 hrs and 47 mins
- Unabridged
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What if you woke up one morning and found you’d acquired another self—a double who was almost you and yet not you at all? What if that double shared many of your preoccupations but, in a twisted, upside-down way, furthered the very causes you’d devoted your life to fighting against? Not long ago, the celebrated activist and public intellectual Naomi Klein had just such an experience—she was confronted with a doppelganger whose views she found abhorrent but whose name and public persona were sufficiently similar to her own that many people got confused about who was who.
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Elite Psychobabble
- By A Reviewer on 09-30-23
By: Naomi Klein
What listeners say about Your Face Belongs to Us
Highly rated for:
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- Meeno
- 12-11-23
A tight, well told story about the future having already arrived.
I first heard Kashmir outline this story on Fresh Air. Diving in deeper with her has been an informative, if disturbing, treat. She’s a direct and vivid writer and her voice has that special lure reserved for great storytellers. She looks at the delineations and limits of what our privacy may have been and how even the pretense of privacy is now dissolving in the brine of Social sharing. We’ve all put ourselves out there and we thought it was all for our own edification. But nothing’s free. We’ve sold our faces to the human catalogue. Ultimately, Kashmir’s story is an important one about how we’ve surrendered our privacy to a digital domain that is the ripe field of AI’s learning. And once learned, AI’s not going to forget…
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- bobcat
- 09-25-23
Outstanding
Assuming there will be a movie because it’s just that good. Found it by Marketplace podcast, couldn’t stop listening .
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- Jared rimer
- 05-16-24
Eye opening
I have been reading articlesab this for years. When this book came out i had to get it. I took awhile to read it but it was very fascinating. Some of the stuff I heard about, others, I haven’t. Very interesting! Keep up the great work!
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- Sharp Reviewer
- 10-17-23
Very disturbing and eye opening
Loved it. What's really shocking is the fact that we cannot do anything to stop this. It is virtually impossible to be anonymous anymore.
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- HeySue
- 10-07-23
Eye opening history of visual digital privacy
A must read for anyone who works in tech. Offers context for everything on the horizon in AI et al.
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- AJ
- 11-16-23
Insightful
Excellent book and cautionary tail of a very real future and now is the time to think how to react to the fast moving wave
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- Rubin
- 11-21-23
Well researched
The book really brought the focus on facial recognition into context with extensive history and existing databases and information on the main company that perfected this tool. Eye opening work
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- Irineo
- 10-02-23
Kinda of disorganized
It has a central story and a history of how this technology came about throughout the ages. It’s kinda weird that one chapter is about one topic then the next is about the other topic then it just keeps alternating. I honestly think it’s because the main story is kinda drawn out way too long. The switching back and forth makes it a little more tolerable. But honestly they should have just trimmed some of the fat and keep the two topics separate. It’s a little annoying listing to a story in 2016 then early 1900s then 2016 then late 1900 then 2016 then early 2000s etc etc. The topic is still interesting.
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- Anonymous User
- 09-27-23
Great read!
A topic I did not understand written in a way that was fascinating and accessible with the twists and turns of novel. Highly recommended!
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- Peter Schleider
- 05-09-24
Must read/listen book
Worth every minute, so much insight and given in context of historical technology that allows the reader to understand that facial recognition is not going away and will be available to many different segments of our society.
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