Meta reignites plans to train AI using UK users' public Facebook and Instagram posts

In This Article:

Meta has confirmed that it's restarting efforts to train its AI systems using public Facebook and Instagram posts from its U.K. userbase.

The company claims it has "incorporated regulatory feedback" into a revised "opt-out" approach to ensure that it's "even more transparent," as its blog post spins it. It is also seeking to paint the move as enabling its generative AI models to "reflect British culture, history, and idiom." But it's less clear what exactly is different about its latest data grab.

From next week, Meta said U.K. users will start to see in-app notifications explaining what it's doing. The company then plans to start using public content to train its AI in the coming months -- or at least do training on data where a user has not actively objected via the process Meta provides.

The announcement comes three months after Facebook's parent company paused its plans due to regulatory pressure in the U.K., with the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) raising concerns over how Meta might use U.K. user data to train its generative AI algorithms -- and how it was going about gaining people's consent. The Irish Data Protection Commission, Meta’s lead privacy regulator in the European Union (EU), also objected to Meta's plans after receiving feedback from several data protection authorities across the bloc -- there is no word yet on when, or if, Meta will restart its AI training efforts in the EU.

For context, Meta has been boosting its AI off user-generated content in markets such as the U.S. for some time but Europe’s comprehensive privacy regulations have created challenges for it -- and for other tech companies -- looking to expand their training datasets in this way.

Despite the existence of EU privacy laws, back in May Meta began notifying users in the region of an upcoming privacy policy change, saying that it would begin using content from comments, interactions with companies, status updates, and photos and their associated captions for AI training. The reasons for doing so, it argued, was that it needed to reflect "the diverse languages, geography and cultural references of the people in Europe."

The changes were due to come into effect on June 26 but Meta's announcement spurred privacy rights nonprofit noyb (aka “none of your business”) to file a dozen complaints with constituent EU countries, arguing that Meta was contravening various aspects of the bloc's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) -- the legal framework which underpins EU Member States' national privacy laws (and also, still, the U.K.'s Data Protection Act).