www.marketwatch.com Open in urlscan Pro
13.32.121.106  Public Scan

URL: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/having-fun-using-faceapp-think-again-you-give-up-more-data-than-you-think-with-this-russia...
Submission Tags: falconsandbox
Submission: On July 15 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Skip to main content

Advertisement

 * Home
 * Latest News
 * Watchlist
 * Market Data Center
    * U.S.
    * Cryptocurrency
    * Europe
    * Rates
    * Asia
    * Futures
    * Currencies

 * Markets
    * U.S. Markets
    * Canada
    * Europe & Middle East
    * Asia
    * Emerging Markets
    * Latin America
    * Market Data

 * Investing
    * Barron's
    * Best New Ideas
    * Stocks
    * IPOs
    * Mutual Funds
    * ETFs
    * Options
    * Bonds
    * Commodities
    * Currencies
    * Cryptocurrencies
    * Futures
    * Financial Adviser Center
    * Cannabis
    * Newswires

 * Barron's
 * Economy & Politics
    * Washington Watch
    * Inflation
    * Coronavirus
    * The Federal Reserve
    * Economic Report
    * Rex Nutting
    * U.S. Economic Calendar
    * Coronavirus Recovery Tracker

 * Personal Finance
    * The Moneyist
    * Spending & Saving
    * Retirement
    * TaxWatch
    * Credit Cards
    * Careers
    * Travel
    * Real Estate
    * Real Estate Listings

 * Retirement
    * Best New Ideas in Retirement
    * Estate Planning
    * Help Me Retire
    * FIRE
    * Taxes
    * Social Security
    * Real Estate
    * Retirement Calculator
    * NewRetirement Planner
    * Where Should I Retire
    * Best Places

 * How to Invest
 * Virtual Stock Exchange
 * Video
    * SectorWatch
    * The Moneyist
    * Getting to Work With
    * Explainomics

 * Podcasts
 * Live Events
 * Picks
    * Food & Wine
    * Home & Kitchen
    * Health & Fitness
    * Fashion & Beauty
    * Loans & Mortgages
    * Money
    * Travel
    * Gifts
    * Technology
    * Real Estate
    * Amazon Prime Day
    * Black Friday
    * Guides

 * Opinion
 * Investor's Business Daily
    * Leaderboard
    * SwingTrader
    * MarketSmith
    * IBDLive

 * Newsletter Center
 * Research & Tools
    * Watchlist
    * Mortgage Calculator
    * Multiple Quotes Tool
    * Stock Screener
    * Earnings Calendar
    * Market Screener
    * IPO Calendar
    * Short Interest
    * Premarket Screener
    * Options Expiration Calendar
    * After Hours Screener
    * Currency Tools
    * Mutual Fund Screener
    * Upgrades & Downgrades
    * Top 25 Mutual Funds
    * Mutual Fund Comparison
    * Economic Calendar
    * Where Should I Retire?
    * Savings Accounts
    * Retirement Planner
    * CDs
    * Mortgage Rates
    * Top 25 ETFs

Sign Up Log In
 * Profile Settings
 * Watchlist
 * Email & Alerts
 * Games

MarketWatch Site Logo A link that brings you back to the homepage.
 * Latest
 * Watchlist
 * Markets
 * Investing
 * Personal Finance
 * Economy
 * Retirement
 * How to Invest
 * Video Center
 * Live Events
 * MarketWatch Picks
 * More
   Latest Watchlist Markets Investing Personal Finance Economy Retirement How to
   Invest Video Center Live Events MarketWatch Picks


 * Account Settings
 * Log In
 * Sign Up

Close Search Overlay


Advertisement

Advertisement

 1. Home
 2. Personal Finance


READ THIS BEFORE USING FACEAPP — YOU GIVE UP MORE PERSONAL DATA THAN YOU REALIZE
ON THIS RUSSIAN-MADE APP

Published: July 22, 2019 at 6:21 a.m. ET
By

JACOB PASSY

  comments


FACEAPP HAS GONE VIRAL AGAIN WITH A FEATURE THAT MAKES USERS LOOK ELDERLY, BUT
EXPERTS SAY IT MAY POSE SECURITY CONCERNS

FACEAPP’S CONNECTIONS TO RUSSIA ARE JUST ONE OF THE MANY SECURITY CONCERNS
PEOPLE SHOULD CONSIDER BEFORE USING THE POPULAR APP.

MarketWatch photo illustration/iStockphoto
 * Email icon
 * Facebook icon
 * Twitter icon
 * Linkedin icon
 * Flipboard icon

 * Print icon
 * Resize icon


REFERENCED SYMBOLS


Advertisement
AAPL
+2.05%
GOOG
-0.67%
GOOGL
-0.89%
TWTR
-1.25%

People are having fun making themselves look older with an app called FaceApp,
but they might also be facing a host of cybersecurity concerns.

FaceApp, a smartphone app that allows users to apply filters onto selfies they
upload, has grown in popularity again thanks to a feature that allows users to
make themselves look older.

But cybersecurity experts have raised several red flags about FaceApp. It’s made
by Wireless Lab, a small company based in Russia and, according to its terms and
conditions, your photos could be used in unexpected ways.


Advertisement

“Cybersecurity experts have raised several red flags about FaceApp. It’s made by
Wireless Lab, a small company based in Russia.”

(The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

“Consumers just think it’s fun and blindly share,” said Robert Siciliano,
security awareness expert at Safr.Me. People get to laugh at their photos, he
said. In return, however, such apps want a chunk of your data.

Remember the Cambridge Analytica scandal? Many Facebook users unwittingly
participated in the “This Is Your Digital Life” personality quiz on the
social-media site, not realizing that doing so meant that they allowed
third-parties to get access to data from them and their friends.



This data included everything from call and text logs to location information —
and the data was analyzed by the now-shuttered British political consulting firm
Cambridge Analytica and used to target advertising to social media users during
the 2016 presidential elections.

The app is available on Apple’s App Store AAPL, +2.05%  and Google Play GOOG,
-0.67%   GOOGL, -0.89%. People around the world have been uploading their “aged”
photos to US:FB  Twitter TWTR, -1.25%  and Instagram.

“‘Any app gathering data points that could lead to facial recognition should be
of concern especially when it’s being used by government agencies.’”

— —Robert Siciliano, security awareness expert at Safr.Me

“There has been a lot of worry regarding Russian-based companies whose hands are
being forced by the Russian government [when] they require a backdoor access to
the companies’ data and servers,” Siciliano said.

FaceApp previously achieved popularity (and some criticism) for features that
let people makes themselves look like another gender or lighten their skin tone.
But the latest ageing filter has gone viral.



The app’s popularity has risen thanks in large part to celebrities, such as
rapper Drake and singing group The Jonas Brothers, who have posted selfies they
edited with FaceApp to social media.


Advertisement

Read more:Apple or Android? Here is the most secure phone you can get

WHY YOU SHOULD BE WARY OF USING FACEAPP

FaceApp’s privacy policy notes its affiliates and service providers “may
transfer information that we collect about you, including personal information
across borders and from your country or jurisdiction to other countries or
jurisdictions around the world.”

“Your photo could be used overseas, including Russia, whose government has been
accused of interfering with the 2016 U.S. presidential election.”

People need to upload their picture to the cloud whenever they use FaceApp. Your
photo could be used overseas, including Russia, whose government has been
accused of interfering with the 2016 U.S. presidential election — with different
laws concerning data protection and privacy than the U.S.

The company’s privacy policy does not explain how it safeguards user content
stored on its servers, which are reportedly located in the United States.
However, the company claims that any data collected is aggregated “so that it
cannot reasonably be used to identify any particular individual User.”

YOUR PHOTOS COULD BE USED FOR FACIAL RECOGNITION TECHNOLOGY

FaceApp essentially owns images uploaded to its service and can use them in any
way it wants. That could include anything from splashing your photo across a
billboard to using it in the development of facial recognition technology.


Advertisement

Users grant the company the license “to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish,
translate, create derivative works from, distribute, publicly perform and
display 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.”

“Any app gathering data points that could lead to facial recognition should be
of concern especially when it’s being used by government agencies, foreign
companies or foreign intelligence,” Siciliano said.

Don’t miss:Facebook launches home video chat—and promises it won’t spy on you

UNHAPPY? YOU WON’T BE ABLE TO SUE FACEAPP

People who downloaded and used the app automatically agreed to a mandatory
arbitration clause — meaning they waived their right to take any legal
complaints to court.

“Except for small claims disputes in which you or FaceApp seek to bring an
individual action in small claims court located in the county of your billing
address or disputes in which you or FaceApp seeks injunctive or other equitable
relief for the alleged unlawful use of intellectual property, you and FaceApp
waive your rights to a jury trial and to have any dispute arising out of or
related to these Terms or our Services resolved in court,” the company’s terms
read.

Also see:Chase is bringing forced arbitration clauses back to its most popular
credit cards

If a consumers wishes still to bring a case to arbitration, it will be held in
Santa Clara Country, Calif., per the terms. Class-action lawsuits are similarly
barred by the clause, and users must file any claim within a year of when the
issue occurred.

If users wish to opt out of binding arbitration, they can, but they must do so
by notifying FaceApp in writing. Those letters must be mailed to the company’s
address: Wireless Lab OOO, 16 Avtovskaya 401, Saint-Petersburg, 198096, Russia.




Advertisement

PARTNER CENTER


Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

MOST POPULAR


Advertisement

TRUMP LOST, AND THE 2020 ELECTION WASN’T STOLEN, GROUP OF PROMINENT
CONSERVATIVES CONCLUDES AFTER EXHAUSTIVE STUDY

‘I SEE BUYING OPPORTUNITIES.’ HOW THIS STOCK TRADER WITH 40 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
MAKES MONEY IN A BEAR MARKET

BANK OF AMERICA SLASHES S&P 500 TARGET TO ‘LOWEST ON THE STREET’ AFTER RECESSION
FORECAST

HOW THIS 38-YEAR-OLD MADE IT FROM 'DEEP POVERTY' TO MILLIONAIRE

AVOID THESE FOOD ITEMS THE NEXT TIME YOU GO SHOPPING IF YOU WANT TO DRASTICALLY
CUT YOUR GROCERY BILL


Advertisement


Advertisement
More from MarketWatch
 * Beware of unsolicited packages after Amazon Prime Day — they could be part of
   a scam
 * Want to delete Facebook? Read what happened to these people first
 * Amazon’s strategy to foil porch pirates with facial recognition hints at a
   ‘dangerous future,’ critics say


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jacob Passy


Jacob Passy is a personal-finance reporter for MarketWatch and is based in New
York.



Community Guidelines • FAQs

Advertisement


PARTNER CONTENT




PARTNER CONTENT



Back to Top
MarketWatch logoGo to the homepage
Copyright © 2022 MarketWatch, Inc. All rights reserved.
By using this site you agree to the Subscriber Agreement & Terms of Use, 
Privacy Notice, and Cookie Notice.
 * Facebook
 * Twitter
 * Linkedin
 * 

 * MARKETWATCH

 * Customer Center
 * Contact Us
 * Newsroom Roster
 * Virtual Stock Exchange
 * BigCharts
 * Copyright Policy
 * Manage Notifications

 * COMPANY

 * Dow Jones
 * Code of Conduct
 * Corrections
 * Reprints & Licensing
 * Digital Self Service
 * Your Ad Choices
 * Corporate Subscriptions
 * Accessibility

 * DOW JONES NETWORK

 * The Wall Street Journal
 * Barron's
 * Financial News London
 * realtor.com
 * Mansion Global

Intraday Data provided by FACTSET and subject to terms of use. Historical and
current end-of-day data provided by FACTSET. All quotes are in local exchange
time. Real-time last sale data for U.S. stock quotes reflect trades reported
through Nasdaq only. Intraday data delayed at least 15 minutes or per exchange
requirements.



Search Clear

Search
Advanced Search

Advertisement


SEARCH RESULTS

All News
Articles
Video
Podcasts






AUTHORS




SECTIONS




COLUMNS




SYMBOLS




PRIVATE COMPANIES




RECENTLY VIEWED TICKERS


NO RECENT TICKERS

Visit a quote page and your recently viewed tickers will be displayed here.

Search Tickers




No results found

No results found