But for those living in the United States, where online privacy laws are not as strict, Meta AI has already been using public posts to train its AI. It’s unclear where else Meta might expand the program.
Privacy watchdogs have raised concerns about the data usage and a lack of specifics about what exactly Meta will do with people’s information. But Meta says it is complying with privacy laws and that the information it is gathering will make services more relevant to the users in a given region.
Here’s what to know about Meta’s AI chatbot and how you can opt out of sharing your information.
Meta’s chatbot is its answer to ChatGPT.
Discover the stories of your interest
Meta AI is a smart assistant software powered by artificial intelligence, available on apps including Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram; it can be used in feeds, chat and search. Similar to OpenAI‘s ChatGPT, Apple‘s Siri or Amazon’s Alexa, it is designed to respond to almost any prompt a user gives it. For example, you might ask: Who’s the greatest tennis player of all time?
“The eternal debate!” Meta AI responded to that query. “While opinions may vary, many experts and fans consider Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic to be among the greatest tennis players of all time.”
Meta AI is powered by LLaMA 3, the company’s new and powerful large language model, an AI technology that can conduct conversations and create images.
The chatbot learns from Instagram and Facebook posts.
The announcement to European users sparked some backlash on Reddit, Tiktok and Twitter, including in the U.S., where Meta was not required to notify users — and therefore users may not have realized — that it had been training its AI with their public posts.
When asked, the smart assistant said it learned from “a massive data set of text” online. The information came from webpages, books, articles and research papers. But some of the data set also came from social media posts — including Facebook and Instagram posts, Meta AI said, adding that its training came from “anonymized and aggregated” data.
On a page about its generative AI features, Meta said photos and text from public posts on Instagram and Facebook were used to train its generative AI models but that private posts and private messages were not used. Users’ prompts for the AI features are also fair game.
A spokesperson for Meta — and its chatbot — did not specify exactly how the public information was being used other than to “build and improve AI experiences.” It is not clear when Meta began to scrape data from users based in the U.S.
In the U.S., opt out by setting your account to private.
For Meta users in the U.S., there isn’t a way to stop Meta AI from learning from your public social media posts, as there are no privacy laws specific to this.
“While we don’t currently have an opt-out feature, we’ve built in-platform tools that allow people to delete their personal information from chats with Meta AI across our apps,” Meta said in a statement Friday.
Those using Meta apps within the European Union, Britain, the European Economic Area and Switzerland were notified that they could opt out, according to Meta.
Here’s how to opt out (for those in Europe).
Visit the Meta Privacy Center from your Facebook account, click on “data settings,” and then click “off-Facebook activity.” Then select “manage your data” and turn off “data sharing,” as well as “AI model training.”
In EU countries, users will also see “GDPR settings.” From there, users can click on “exercise my rights” and submit a request to opt out. Users also must give a reason for opting out.
On Instagram, users can tap on “settings,” then “about,” and then “privacy policy,” which will lead to information on Meta AI and how to opt out.
Is it legal for Meta AI to use my data?
In Facebook’s legal terms, that company says that “if you share a photo on Facebook, you give us permission to store, copy, and share it with others.” Depending on your settings, that photo can be used for other Meta products, according to the company.
In Europe, even with the opt-out feature Meta introduced to comply with privacy laws, watchdog groups have raised concerns about the sweeping nature of the data usage.
The European Center for Digital Rights, known as NOYB (None of Your Business), filed complaints in several European countries about Meta’s policy change.
“Meta doesn’t say what it will use the data for, so it could either be a simple chatbot, extremely aggressive personalized advertising or even a killer drone,” Max Schrems, the chair and founder of NOYB, said in a news release.