Meta Wants to Upload Every Photo You Have to Its Cloud to Give You AI Suggestions
19 Articles
19 Articles
Meta launched an option that allows them to access the reel photos of their users using them in training their AI models


Meta wants to upload every photo you have to its cloud to give you AI suggestions
Meta's latest feature gives Facebook the power to continuously upload your private photos to its cloud — even the ones you never intended to share. Here's how to stop it.Image credit: MetaIn a time where internet users are goaded into giving away their data to nearly every company, Meta has decided to take it several steps further. It wants you to give Facebook access to your entire camera roll and allow it to upload your photos to its cloud.The…
Smile, You’re Training the Machine
You didn’t post that photo, Meta might still use it. Your camera roll is now a potential training set, whether you hit “share” or not.Meta is inching closer to treating your private, unpublished photos like public property. In a recent test, Facebook prompted users to opt into “cloud processing,” allowing Meta to regularly upload images from their camera roll.The pitch? Curated content suggestions, think AI-generated recaps, birthday collages, a…
A new pop-up from Meta is causing a stir. Facebook users who want to upload a story are asked to release their photos for "cloud processing." By doing so, they simultaneously grant Meta AI access to images from their smartphone that weren't even published on Facebook. This raises questions about data privacy, which is why sites like The Verge are currently reporting on it. By agreeing to "cloud processing," users allow Meta AI to analyze their p…
Light Start: Meta's AI Hive, Tesla Takes A Drive, Muzo's Flight Sim Comes Alive, And Super Mario Strikers To Arrive - Stuff South Africa
Meta’s going after your private images, too The idea that Facebook wants access to your smartphone’s private camera roll isn’t a very comforting thought, but it’s even more disturbing once you see why it wants access. According to a report from TechCrunch, the company is suggesting users AI-generated versions of their own images, including ones they haven’t even uploaded. Meta isn’t pulling this off by sneakily penetrating your smartphone’s defe…
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