TL;DR: U.S. Customs and Border Protection signed a one-year, $225,000 contract for 15 Clearview AI licenses at its National Targeting Center. The system searches a database of 60 billion+ images scraped from social media, news sites, and anywhere else your face appears online. CBP calls it “tactical targeting” and “counter-network analysis.” The contract doesn’t say whether agents can search U.S. citizens’ faces, what images they can upload, or how long results are kept. This landed the same week Congress introduced the ICE Out of Our Faces Act to ban the technology entirely. One branch of government is buying. Another is trying to outlaw it.

The Contract

The deal went public on USASpending.gov in early February 2026 under contract number 70CMSD25P00000111. Here’s what’s in it [1]:

  • $225,000 for one year of Clearview AI access
  • 15 software licenses for CBP analysts
  • Deployed at the National Targeting Center’s intelligence division
  • Extended to Border Patrol’s headquarters intelligence division
  • Starts September 2026
  • Purpose: “tactical targeting” and “strategic counter-network analysis

CBP explained the investment would let analysts “more effectively and efficiently identify, target, screen, and interdict inbound and outbound passengers who pose a threat to national security” [1].

This isn’t CBP’s first encounter with Clearview. According to DHS’s own AI inventory, CBP began piloting the technology in 2025 [1]. The new contract formalizes what was already happening quietly.

What CBP Just Bought Access To

Clearview AI scraped over 60 billion images from the internet. Facebook. Instagram. LinkedIn. Dating apps. News sites. Your vacation photos. Your kid’s birthday party that someone posted publicly. All of it vacuumed into a searchable facial recognition database [2].

Upload a photo. Get matches. Get links to where those images originally appeared online. That’s the product.

Nobody in those 60 billion photos consented. No social media platform authorized the scraping. Clearview did it anyway, got sued, got fined across multiple countries, and kept selling to governments.

The company has racked up enforcement actions and fines across the globe:

  • Netherlands: €30.5 million fine (September 2024) [3]
  • France: €20 million fine (2022) [4]
  • Italy: €20 million fine [4]
  • Greece: €20 million fine [4]
  • UK: £7.5 million penalty from the ICO [5]
  • Australia: Found to have breached privacy law, though the regulator later dropped enforcement [6]

Total European fines alone: over €90 million. Clearview’s response to all of it has been, essentially, that foreign regulators can’t reach a U.S. company. They haven’t paid [3].

What the Contract Doesn’t Say

The contract contains nondisclosure requirements for contractors handling biometric data. It does not contain answers to the questions that actually matter [1][2]:

  • Can agents search U.S. citizens’ faces? Not specified.
  • What images can agents upload? Not specified.
  • How long are search results retained? Not specified.
  • What oversight exists for individual searches? Not specified.
  • Are there audit logs? Not specified.

DHS’s AI inventory includes a carefully worded assurance: “No enforcement action is taken based solely on the leads generated by this tool. All potential identifications undergo thorough investigation and validation” [1].

That sounds reassuring until you think about it. “Not based solely on” means Clearview results can be a factor in enforcement actions. And “thorough investigation and validation” is whatever the agent doing the search says it is.

The Accuracy Problem

NIST testing on facial recognition systems shows they perform well on high-quality, controlled photos: studio headshots, passport images, that sort of thing. But error rates spike for uncontrolled images: street photos, social media snapshots, anything taken in the real world. Sometimes those error rates exceed 20% [2].

NIST’s recommendation: use these systems only for “investigative” purposes (generating ranked lists of possible matches) because automatic matches produce false positives [2].

CBP’s contract calls this “tactical targeting.” That language suggests real-time or near-real-time identification in operational settings. Not an analyst sitting at a desk reviewing a ranked list. That’s a gap between how NIST says these systems should be used and how CBP appears to be deploying them.

DHS’s Facial Recognition Shopping Spree

CBP’s $225,000 Clearview contract isn’t happening in isolation. It’s part of a DHS-wide expansion of biometric surveillance:

  • ICE signed a $9.2 million Clearview AI contract in September 2025, nearly 40 times larger than CBP’s deal [7]
  • DHS maintains a database of 1.2 billion face images through NEC’s Mobile Fortify system, used by ICE agents in the field [8]
  • The Pentagon appointed a former Clearview AI advisory board member (Owen West) to run its $2 billion Defense Innovation Unit [9]
  • ICE agents carry smartphones loaded with facial recognition that can scan faces during encounters on the street [10]

Albert Fox Cahn of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project put it bluntly: “The use of Clearview AI by federal agencies is essentially mass surveillance laundered through a private company” [11].

Congress Pushes Back: Sort Of

On February 5, 2026 (days before the CBP contract went public), Senators Edward Markey, Jeff Merkley, and Ron Wyden, along with Representative Pramila Jayapal, introduced the ICE Out of Our Faces Act [12].

The bill would:

  • Ban ICE and CBP from buying or using facial recognition technology
  • Require deletion of all biometric data already collected
  • Allow individuals and state attorneys general to sue for civil penalties

Senator Merkley: “Without oversight, this technology is dangerous in the hands of any government” [1].

The bill has backing from the ACLU, EFF, EPIC, Fight for the Future, Human Rights First, and Access Now. It’s also the most aggressive federal facial recognition ban ever proposed for immigration enforcement.

It has zero chance of passing the current Congress.

Which means CBP’s Clearview contract will go live in September, and the legislative ban will collect dust in committee. That’s not cynicism. That’s arithmetic.

What You Can Do

Limit Your Public Face Data

Clearview scrapes publicly accessible images. Set your social media profiles to private. Remove old photos from public-facing platforms. Every photo you leave public is another data point in a 60-billion-image database.

Support the Legal Fight

The ACLU’s facial recognition campaign and EFF’s About Face project track cases and push for bans. Your state may have pending biometric privacy legislation.

Know the Opt-Out (It’s Barely an Opt-Out)

Clearview AI offers a privacy request form where you can ask to be excluded. But you have to provide a photo of yourself to request removal, giving them the very data you want deleted. And it doesn’t stop law enforcement from searching you.

Contact Your Representatives

The ICE Out of Our Faces Act needs co-sponsors. Call your senators and representative. Reference the bill by name. Tell them you oppose CBP’s use of scraped biometric data for immigration enforcement.

References

  1. FedScoop: CBP to Strengthen ‘Tactical Targeting,’ ‘Counter-Network Analysis’ with Clearview AI (February 2026)
  2. WebProNews: Behind the Badge and the Algorithm: How CBP’s New Clearview AI Deal Signals a Turning Point (February 2026)
  3. The Hacker News: Clearview AI Faces €30.5M Fine for Building Illegal Facial Recognition Database (September 2024)
  4. Barracuda Networks: Clearview AI’s Massive Fine for GDPR Violations (October 2024)
  5. URM Consulting: ICO’s Appeal in Clearview AI Case Upheld (2024)
  6. Office of the Australian Information Commissioner: Clearview AI Breached Australians’ Privacy
  7. State of Surveillance: ICE Just Bought Access to 60 Billion Stolen Faces (January 2026)
  8. State of Surveillance: DHS’s 1.2 Billion Face Database (2026)
  9. State of Surveillance: Clearview AI Gets a Pentagon Champion (January 2026)
  10. NBC News: How ICE Agents Are Using Facial Recognition Technology to Bring Surveillance to the Streets (February 2026)
  11. Yahoo News: Your Vacation Selfies Feed CBP Spy Net: $225K Clearview Deal Unlocks 60B Images (February 2026)
  12. ID Tech Wire: U.S. Customs and Border Protection Signs Clearview AI Deal for Tactical Targeting (February 2026)