FaceApp has exploded with celebrities including , , NBA star and late-night host using it to edit pictures of themselves to appear decades older or years younger.

The photo-editing app, created by Russia-based developer Wireless Lab in 2017, uses artificial intelligence software to also 鈥渟wap鈥 your gender. It鈥檚 recently experienced a surge in popularity with the app becoming the most-downloaded free item from Apple's App Store and Google Play Store.

But privacy experts argue the app requires users to give up too much personal information, and that users should be reading the application鈥檚 terms and conditions more carefully.


FACEAPP CAN USE AN IMAGE ESSENTIALLY HOW IT WANTS

According to the 鈥溾 section of FaceApp鈥檚 terms and conditions, app users agree to 鈥済rant FaceApp a perpetual, irrevocable, nonexclusive, royalty-free, worldwide, fully-paid, transferable sub-licensable license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, publicly perform.鈥

Technology analyst Carmi Levi told 麻豆影视 Channel this means users are allowing developers to "do whatever they want with the (photos) and we have no legal recourse."

He added that the FaceApp terms and conditions are not unique. "It's not just this app, most apps we install need to access certain resources .. like the microphone or the camera or our contacts," he said, which he warns leads to "dozens of applications on our phones that have all sorts of crazy access."

Privacy expert Ann Cavoukian agrees, telling The Canadian Press that users should be wary of apps that share something as personal as one's face because they may be used in unintended ways.


FACEAPP CAN MAKE MONEY OFF YOU

The terms also state the app can profit off user-submitted images without paying them a dime.

The app states it can 鈥渄isplay your User Content and any name, username or likeness provided in connection with your User Content in all media formats and channels now known or later developed, without compensation to you.鈥

鈥淲hen you post or otherwise share User Content on or through our Services, you understand that your User Content and any associated information (such as your [username], location or profile photo) will be visible to the public,鈥 it continued.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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FACEAPP WILL UPLOAD PHOTO TO CLOUD, BUT NOT ENTIRE PHOTO LIBRARY

An unsubstantiated allegation against the app is that a user鈥檚 entire photo library is uploaded to FaceApp鈥檚 servers.

The confusion stemmed from an iPhone feature that shows users鈥 photo library within the app. It鈥檚 an Apple feature that lets you select a specific photo, but doesn鈥檛 grant the app full access to the library 鈥 even though it looks like it does. However, users do have the option of giving the app access to their photo library.

Matthew Panzarino, editor-in-chief of technology news website TechCrunch, noted another concern with FaceApp. He that when people edit a photo, it isn鈥檛 edited on a user鈥檚 device and, instead, FaceApp 鈥渦ploads your photo to the cloud for processing.鈥

The developer Wireless Lab confirmed to the outlet that while the app may store the photos in the cloud, 鈥渕ost鈥 are deleted after 48 hours and none of the users鈥 data is transferred to Russia.

It also told the outlet that users can request to have their data deleted.

FaceApp requiring users to upload their selected photos to the cloud was first noticed by French security researcher , Guardian Firewall CEO and several other . They made the findings after each analyzed the app鈥檚 network traffic.


FACEAPP COLLECTS BROWSING HISTORY AND LOCATION

In addition to photos generated by the app, FaceApp also collects information about browsing history and location.

But the terms also state "we will not rent or sell your information to third parties outside FaceApp." It did explicitly state that the app will share information with "third-party advertising partners鈥 to deliver targeted ads to users.

When the app was first released, criticized FaceApp鈥檚 privacy conditions as users were complaining at the time that the privacy policy was 鈥渃reeping people out.鈥

Around the same time, the chair of the Australian Privacy Foundation David Vaile said FaceApp鈥檚 developers asked for 鈥渨ay more rights than they need to offer the service to you.鈥


FACEAPP SHOULD HAVE BEEN MORE UPFRONT: CRITICS

Levi said because users aren鈥檛 in complete control of their photos "once you use the app, you've pretty much opened the door and you can't really close it afterwards."

Strafach agreed and said the company should have been more upfront and urged users not to add the app. "Bottom line is they were handling sensitive data and they handled it cavalierly and that's just not cool," he told The Associated Press.

On Wednesday, the ranking Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer wrote a letter to the FBI and Federal Trade Commission saying he was concerned the app posed a 鈥渘ational security and privacy risks for millions of U.S. citizens."


FACEAPP BRIEFLY RELEASED RACE-SWAPPING FILTER

When the app was released in January 2017, it came with filters which added fake smiles to photos and other filters which made a user look 鈥溾 by essentially whitening people鈥檚 faces.

The latter was briefly renamed 鈥渟park鈥 before it was removed in April following online anger.

The founder, Yaroslav Goncharov, was saying, 鈥渨e are deeply sorry for this unquestionably serious issue. It is an unfortunate side-effect of the underlying neural network caused by the training set bias, not intended behavior.鈥

Later that year, the same app when it briefly released its 鈥渆thnicity change filters鈥 which allowed users to see what they鈥檇 look like if they were black, Asian, Indian or white.

Following backlash, the founder and apologized.

With a file from The Canadian Press and The Associated Press

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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