Full-Time
Posted on 9/24/2025
AI platform for unstructured data lifecycle
No salary listed
Remote in India
Remote
Clarifai provides a platform for building and managing artificial intelligence that specializes in unstructured data like images, video, text, and audio. Users can label data, select pre-trained models for tasks like content moderation, or train custom models using a no-code visual workflow builder. Unlike many competitors, Clarifai offers a full-stack solution that handles the entire AI lifecycle and can be deployed in the cloud, on-premise, or at the edge. The company's goal is to make it easy for developers and enterprises of all skill levels to create and scale AI applications.
Company Size
51-200
Company Stage
Series C
Total Funding
$101.2M
Headquarters
Wilmington, Delaware
Founded
2013
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Remote Work Options
"The FTC does not have our backs, that much is clear" - April 11, 2026 Why it matters. The settlement reveals a regulatory gap that lets companies profit from user data while evading meaningful penalties, eroding consumer trust and prompting calls for stricter privacy enforcement. Key takeaways. * - FTC settlement imposes no fine, only a data-misrepresentation ban. * - OKCupid shared user photos with Clarifai, a facial-recognition rival. * - Settlement took 12 years, highlighting regulatory sluggishness. * - Executives had financial stakes in Clarifai, raising conflict-of-interest concerns. * - Users remain vulnerable as data-use misrepresentation stays largely unchecked. Pulse analysis. The Federal Trade Commission's recent settlement with OKCupid and its parent Match Group has drawn sharp criticism for its lack of financial repercussions. While the agreement bars the companies from misrepresenting how they use and share personal data, it does not penalize the actual transfer of millions of user photos to Clarifai, a facial-recognition competitor to Clearview AI. This outcome reflects a broader trend where privacy violations are often resolved through negotiated handshakes rather than substantive fines, leaving users with little recourse. Beyond the immediate parties, the case illustrates systemic weaknesses in U.S. data-privacy enforcement. The alleged misconduct dates back to 2014, yet it took twelve years for the FTC to intervene, and even then, the remedy was limited to a permanent prohibition on deceptive disclosures. Executives at OKCupid and Match were financially invested in Clarifai, creating a clear conflict of interest that went unchecked. Such delays and minimal penalties embolden other tech firms to treat user data as a tradable asset, knowing that regulatory consequences are likely to be symbolic rather than punitive. For businesses and policymakers, the settlement serves as a warning sign. Companies must anticipate stricter scrutiny as legislators consider comprehensive privacy bills that could impose heftier fines and mandatory transparency standards. Meanwhile, consumers are urged to demand clearer data-use policies and to support platforms that prioritize privacy. Strengthening enforcement mechanisms will be essential to restore confidence in digital services and to prevent the normalization of data-sharing practices that sidestep user consent. The above line comes from Kaiser Fung in the context of this story, which is horrifying not so much in its details-lots more horrifying things are happening in wars around the world-but in how openly it's all being done: The FTC has "settled" with OKCupid, which is a dating app owned by the Match group, on giving data to a face recognition company (Clarifai, a competitor of Clearview) without proper notification to its users (link). I Kaiser put "settled" in quotes because throughout the story of the data belonging to Americans, the meaning of many words has been warped beyond recognition. This is, as Ars Technica pointed out in its header, a "settlement" without any financial penalty... The FTC claimed it knew what happened: based on the passage quoted by Ars Technica, it appeared that they merely repeated the story told by OKCupid, Match, and Clarifai. They claimed that no formal agreement existed but disclosed that the founder of OKCupid and the CEO of Match were both "financially invested" in Clarifai. These parties somehow believed that this cover story gave them a get-out-of-jail card, a rationale to support their use of the word "sharing". In fact, this is even more troubling than if a straightforward commercial agreement were to exist. For one, this story proves that user data at tech companies are at the hands of individuals. (PULSE already sort of knew from some past actions e.g. by Elon Musk.) It also shows that these individuals - none of whom face any kind of sanctions - will sell out their users for personal financial gain. When no agreement exists, it's harder to trace where, when and what data have left the building... This settlement stemmed from actions that took place in 2014, so it took 12 years for regulators to uphold the law by a friendly handshake with the offenders... Let's read the terms of the settlement carefully, shall PULSE? Hold on to your seat belts, this is truly scary: OKCupid and Match... agreed to a permanent prohibition barring them from misrepresenting how they use and share personal data. Wait, so businesses are heretofore not prohibited from "misrepresenting how they use and share personal data"? It takes 12 years and a negotiated settlement to confirm to Americans that its businesses are in fact free to misrepresent how they use and share personal data - unless the FTC imposes a specific "permanent" ban from lying? I'm not the first person to note that white collar crime is basically legal now. P.S. Way back when, OK Cupid had a blog! I guess that you can make cool graphs (there were more here but the links no longer work) while still misrepresenting how you use and sell, or share, personal data. Want to join the conversation?
FTC says OkCupid's data sharing was a bad match. LinkedIn Facebook X * The FTC reached a proposed settlement with the operators of OkCupid to resolve allegations that the dating app violated Section 5 of the FTC Act by sharing users' personal information with a third-party AI company despite promising otherwise in its privacy policy. * According to the complaint, OkCupid gave Clarifai - an AI company in which two of OkCupid's founders were financially invested - access to millions of users' data, including nearly three million user photos plus demographic and location information, without notice to the consumers or an opportunity to opt out. * The FTC alleges Clarifai was not a service provider, business partner, or affiliate permitted under OkCupid's privacy policy, and that OkCupid operators later took extensive steps to conceal and deny the sharing. * The proposed settlement would bar the defendant companies from misrepresenting their privacy practices and impose 10 years of compliance reporting, FTC monitoring, and recordkeeping obligations. DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations. Attorney Advertising. (C) Cozen O'Connor 2026 Publish your content on JD Supra. * | Increased readership * | Actionable analytics * | Ongoing writing guidance Join more than 70,000 authors publishing their insights on JD Supra
Novita AI named a top AI infrastructure vendor on Ramp. Novita AI earned its spot as a leading AI infrastructure provider on Ramp's February 2026 trending software list, a distinction based on expenditure from over 50,000 businesses. SAN FRANCISCO, March 24, 2026 /PRNewswire/ - Novita AI, the platform unlocking the power of affordable and reliable AI inference for developers, has been recognized as one of the top AI infrastructure vendors on Ramp's February 2026 Top Software Vendors list. This monthly ranking is based on actual spend from more than 50,000 businesses on its corporate card and bill pay platform. Novita was recognized alongside Cerebras, Runware, Clarifai, Crusoe, and Modal as a trending AI infrastructure company. Previously, AI infrastructure was defined by Ramp as a company that hosts models and serves providers. They have renamed that category "Agent Hosting and Serving" to align with the popularity of agents and releases such as OpenClaw. However, many developers have concerns about agents due to the lack of security measures in place. With Novita AI's Agent Sandbox, users can safely run agents in a fully isolated environment with system level separation. For any other agent infrastructure needs, please visit their website to learn more. About Novita AI Novita AI is an AI agent cloud platform helping developers and startups build, deploy, and scale models and agentic applications with high performance, reliability, and cost efficiency. They offer model APIs, LLM dedicated endpoints, and GPU rentals for both developers and AI-native companies. Novita serves more than 350K developers today, who utilize more than 1T tokens per day to build and run agents. SOURCE Novita AI 15 minutes ago
Clarifai launches Reasoning Engine optimized for agentic AI inference.
Clarifai has unveiled a new reasoning engine that promises to make running AI models twice as fast and 40% cheaper, marking a major leap in AI infrastructure efficiency.