The Truth About Meta's Data Harvesting in Australia

Published On Wed Sep 11 2024
The Truth About Meta's Data Harvesting in Australia

Meta admits scraping Aussie data to train AI tools | Southern ...

Your digital subscription includes access to content from all our websites in your region. Access unlimited content and the digital versions of our print editions - Today's Paper. Australians need greater legal protection to prevent tech giants harvesting their personal information, including photos of their children, to train generative AI tools.

What Is the Network Effect?Politicians and academics issued the call on Wednesday after Meta executives revealed photos and posts Australians shared on Facebook and Instagram as far back as 2007 had been used to build its AI models. The US company confirmed its use of the data at the Senate inquiry into Adopting Artificial Intelligence in Canberra, with representatives also revealing European options to prevent the content being used would not be extended to Australians. The inquiry, which is expected to present a final report next week, is examining AI trends, opportunities and risks, as well as its impact on elections and the environment.

Meta Privacy Policy and Data Usage

Meta privacy policy global director Melinda Claybaugh told the Senate committee it ingested content users shared on its platforms to train its generative AI tools, Llama and Meta AI, if they shared posts publicly. Ms. Claybaugh also said Meta did not use photos posted by children but, under questioning, revealed any photos of children shared by adults were used to train AI.

Privacy Policy Update Allows Meta to Use Your Data"I want to be very clear that we are not using data from accounts of under 18-year-olds to train our models," she said. "We are using public photos posted by people over 18." Ms. Claybaugh said Australian Facebook and Instagram users could avoid having their content used to train AI by hiding it from public view, but said they would not be offered an option to opt out of the scheme that was available in some other nations.

"We are offering an opt-out to users in Europe, however that is not a settled legal situation," she said. "The solution in Europe is specific to Europe." But Labor Senator Tony Sheldon, who chaired the inquiry, called the tech giant's use of personal photos "an unprecedented violation" and called for legal restrictions on its behavior.

Implications and Reactions

RMIT University technology and information associate dean Dana McKay said Meta's use of personal content would probably shock many users and demonstrated the need for stronger regulation. "This is a clear sign we need new privacy laws," she said. "In this case, Australian people were unaware and it's not clear the (data) scraping has benefited them." Meta Asia Pacific public policy vice-president Simon Milner defended the company's use of Australians' data, telling senators AI risks such as bias could be addressed by harvesting more local information.

He admitted the company's 20,000-word privacy policy was onerous for users but said asking them to share their data would be a frustrating experience. "You're trying to get that balance right all the time but a kind of compulsory opt-in at all times, it would be extremely annoying for most people across the internet," Mr. Milner said. "We know that for a fact." The Senate committee, which has also heard from tech firms including Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, is expected to present a final report by September 19.

Sign up for our newsletter to stay up to date. We care about the protection of your data. Read our Privacy Policy.