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Today, the FTC continues its fight against unsupported claims about facial recognition through a proposed settlement with software company IntelliVision. According to the FTC, IntelliVision advertised AI-based facial recognition software that it claimed had one of the highest accuracy rates on the market and performed with zero gender or racial bias. IntelliVision also told potential customers its software was trained on millions of images from across the world and had anti-spoofing technology that couldn’t be fooled by photos or video images. The problem? The FTC says IntelliVision did not have support to back up these claims.

To resolve the case, IntelliVision agreed not to misrepresent the accuracy or effectiveness of its facial recognition technology. It also agreed not to make accuracy or efficacy claims about its facial recognition technology without competent and reliable testing that supports the claims.

If you sell a biometric-based, artificial intelligence-driven tool, you might be tempted to give potential customers a long list of attributes your product has and reasons it’s a perfect fit for every business. Don’t go overboard. Make sure your ads stick to the facts and don’t go beyond what you can prove. Here are some tips to avoid breaking the law and misleading consumers.

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