Around 3 million user photos from dating app OkCupid were used for AI training by a third-party company in direct contravention of the company’s own privacy policy … The privacy breach dates back to 2014, but TNW reports that the case was only finally resolved this month, with both the photos and the AI model generated from them being deleted. The underlying incident began over a decade ago. OkCupid’s founders were investors in Clarifai, and Clarifai’s founder Matthew Zeiler contacted OkCupid co-founder Maxwell Krohn in 2014 to request access to its data. “We’re collecting data now and just realized that OKCupid must have a HUGE amount of awesome data for this,” Zeiler wrote, according to court documents cited by Reuters. OkCupid handed over nearly three million user photos, along with location and demographic data, without any formal agreement, without placing restrictions on how the data could be used, and without notifying users or allowing them to opt out. Yep, it was apparently that casual.…