Meta employees are reportedly upset over a mandatory program that tracks their workplace activity to train the company's AI models. The initiative, which monitors keystrokes, mouse movements, and application usage, has sparked concerns about privacy and being forced to contribute to AI development without consent.
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Meta will begin tracking the mouse and keyboard activity of some employees at its offices to collect data for training its AI models, according to an internal memo. The program, which is opt-in and anonymized, aims to improve productivity AI tools but has raised privacy concerns among staff.
Meta plans to record employees' keystrokes and use this data to train its AI models. The company says this will help improve its artificial intelligence systems. The data collection will be implemented across Meta's workforce.
Meta plans to capture employee mouse movements and keystrokes to train AI models. The data collection will be anonymized and aggregated, with employees able to opt out. This initiative aims to improve AI's understanding of human-computer interactions.
Meta plans to track employees' clicks and keystrokes to train its artificial intelligence systems. The company will collect data from internal tools and software used by workers to improve AI models.
Netlify states that it will not use customer code or data to train its AI models without explicit permission. The company emphasizes that customers retain ownership of their code and data, and Netlify will not use this content for AI training purposes unless customers opt in.
Meta plans to use employee tracking software that monitors mouse movements and keyboard usage to help train AI agents. The company aims to collect data on how employees interact with computers to improve AI assistants.
FastVLA is a robotics training method that enables training 7B parameter policies for $0.48 per hour on Nvidia T4/L4 GPUs. The approach makes large-scale vision-language-action model training more accessible and cost-effective.
Meta plans to capture employee mouse movements and keystrokes as training data for its AI systems. The company will collect this data from work computers to improve its artificial intelligence models. This data collection will be implemented across Meta's workforce.
Meta plans to capture employee mouse movements and keystrokes to gather training data for its artificial intelligence systems. The company will collect this data from employees who volunteer to participate in the program.
Meta plans to begin collecting employee mouse movements and keystrokes for AI training purposes starting in 2026. The data collection aims to improve AI models by analyzing work patterns and interactions. The company states this will be done with appropriate privacy safeguards in place.
The article discusses how Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) trains large language models to produce responses that please humans, similar to training dogs with rewards. This approach may lead to sycophantic behavior where models tell users what they want to hear rather than providing truthful or helpful information.
Chinese tech workers are beginning to train AI versions of themselves to handle routine tasks. This emerging practice allows human employees to focus on more complex work while their AI counterparts manage repetitive duties.
GitHub Copilot's new policy allows using customer data for AI training unless users opt out, highlighting governance concerns. This change raises questions about data privacy and control in AI development. Organizations must now actively manage their data usage preferences.
Atlassian has enabled default data collection from its products to train AI models, though customers can opt out. The company states this will improve AI features while maintaining privacy and security standards.