The ‘disturbing’ website that can track down EVERY photo of you that exists online in seconds using creepy AI
HAVE you ever wondered how many pictures you've accidentally photobombed or where old images of you have ended up online?
Well, there's a website that promises to show you all of that and more, for a price.
PimEyes is a controversial website that emerged as a hobby project in 2017, before being commercialised in 2019.
It allows users to search the whole web for their face, and up until recently, nothing stopped you from searching for someone else's.
For monthly subscriptions which range between £30.99 and an eyewatering £300.99 per month, users are granted significant internet trawling powers.
The company says it helps people protect themselves from "scammers, identity thieves, or people who use your image illegally" by showing them where their photos are being used without consent.
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Depending on which subscription you have, PimEyes will even help draft up data protection 'takedown notices' to have images removed from websites.
However, the Polish company, which is thought to be Chinese state-owned, has already wound up on the radar of governments and regulators across Europe.
As part of a House of Lords debate on CCTV and surveillance in February, Lord Strathcarron said AI search engines like PimEyes mean "absolutely anybody can be tracked and traced anywhere at any time.
"It is not hyperbolic to say that, if left unchecked, these applications will entirely alter our concept of privacy and be open sesame to snoopers, stalkers, blackmailers, cybercriminals and bad actors of every kind."
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Germany fined PimEyes late last year under GDPR over the "massive endangerment of the rights and freedoms of citizens" and a "lack of data protection compliance", according to proceedings.
PimEyes slipped into hot water again last month when it was revealed by Wired that the company's 'crawler' teams had been scraping images of dead people from Ancestry.com, to build up its personal database.
While the company has been subject to inquiries in both the UK and US, both have found no breaches in privacy law.
PimEyes director Giorgi Gobronidze told The Sun: "The US and the UK authorities already held their inquiries regarding our company and as the inspection of our activities has revealed there is no violation of any privacy regulation.
"I would really like to know what is the real motive of so called vigilant activists and individuals, when they simply try to cause as much repetitional damage as possible... as if we have been facilitating authoritarian regimes to track down political dissidents."
One Twitter influencer, Kristen Ruby, said she liked PimEyes despite the controversy.
"The tool is controversial - but it is one of the best tools for finding who has used my face without my consent. I then send takedown notices," she said, adding that "It's disturbing but extremely valuable."
However, a software engineer and a former developer for Apple has warned that the website is helping to promote 'doxxing' - which is the act of revealing someone’s personal information online and is a form of harassment.
"On websites like 4chan and Reddit, new threads appear daily for doxxing requests. Just last week, someone PimEyes'd me and threatened me," Cher Scarlett wrote on Twitter.
"This company is a privacy and security mess."
The anonymous blackmailer found Scarlett's face in a sex trafficked video of her from 2005, when she was just 19-years-old.
The website has been dubbed a "stalkers dream" online.
PimEyes acts in a similar way to Google's reverse image search but apparently uses AI image recognition to speed this process up.
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Scarlett is doubtful over the sophistication of the technology.
However, Gobronidze maintained that Scarlett's accusations are unfounded.
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