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Meta is repurposing personal Facebook and Instagram posts as AI training data, raising concerns about the privacy implications of transforming digital memories into fodder for machine learning algorithms.

Key points about Meta’s AI training plans: Meta recently announced that public posts, photos and even names from Facebook and Instagram will be used to train AI models starting June 26th, effectively treating users’ online histories as a time capsule of humanity:

  • Private messages, posts shared only with friends, and Instagram Stories are excluded, but all other public content is fair game for Meta’s AI.
  • Europeans have been given a temporary reprieve due to privacy concerns raised by regulators, but the posts of American users have already been used for training since 2023.
  • The inclusion of mundane yet personal posts and milestones makes Meta’s data repurposing feel especially unsettling to some users.

Other tech companies also leveraging user data: A survey of other platforms revealed that Meta is far from alone in this practice – many are turning users’ digital traces into AI training data to varying degrees:

  • Tumblr will share public posts with AI research partners unless users opt out.
  • Samples of “anonymized” and “aggregated” YahooMail emails are being used internally to train AI models for tasks like summarizing messages.
  • Microsoft’s LinkedIn is using public posts, minus some unspecified “personal details”, to train its AI.
  • Google is not using data from its productivity tools but may train on public YouTube videos. Microsoft also says data from Office apps is off-limits.

Repackaging digital histories to mimic humanity: As tech companies digest the collective online past to build AI models, our digital memories are being transmuted into the building blocks of future algorithms:

  • Much like a time capsule used by fictional future civilizations to understand the past, our aggregated posts and photos are painting a picture of humanity for AI to learn from.
  • The trend raises philosophical questions about the nature of our digital histories and legacies as they are reduced to machine learning training sets.
  • While some see it as a violation, others view it as the inevitable next step in leveraging big data to advance AI capabilities in language, vision, and beyond.

Wrapping up the implications: Meta’s announcement has intensified the debate around using personal online data to train AI models, highlighting the tension between technological progress and individual privacy rights in an age of accelerating artificial intelligence. As more of our lives are captured digitally across a fragmented landscape of apps and platforms, the battle over who gets to learn from and leverage those digital traces – and to what ends – will only escalate. Regulators, tech companies, privacy advocates and users themselves will all have a role in shaping frameworks and norms around the AI-driven repurposing of personal data. The one certainty is that the AI genie is out of the bottle – the question now is how its ravenous appetite for training data will be fed, and at what potential cost.

My Memories Are Just Meta's Training Data Now

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