Of course, modern AI models today were basically entirely trained on public data from the internet. After these models started gaining popularity the internet has become a lot more strict about what data it is willing to share. Many big websites now block AI from accessing their data unless they’re paid for it. Hence, using public data from Meta’s own social media platforms seems like an easy choice to make.
But, much like how the EU has been a thorn in Apple’s side, authorities weren’t convinced about letting Meta train its models. After dialog with the U.K.’s ICO (Information Commissioner’s Office) Meta now has official permission. The ICO claims Meta will now make it easier for users to opt out of having their data used to train AI.
Meta AI on WhatsApp. | Image credit — PhoneArena
That hasn’t stopped almost every major company today from investing heavily in it, though. Meta AI, for example, is now present in some of Meta’s services like WhatsApp. The company is also working on AI-powered AR smart glasses, something it deems the future of computing.
Then we’ve also got Google’s Gemini, Samsung’s Galaxy AI and Apple Intelligence. Suffice it to say, AI is here to stay, and that means a lot of your data is going to be used to train it.
AI definitely has the potential to revolutionize the world but I don’t think people will ever be fully comfortable with being used as data points. I won’t be surprised if some regions outright ban AI models from scraping data from the local population.