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Meta employees are up in arms over a mandatory program to train AI on their

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Why This Matters

Meta's new mandatory software to track employee keystrokes and mouse movements aims to enhance AI training by capturing real user interactions. However, this move has sparked significant internal backlash, highlighting concerns over privacy and employee autonomy. The development underscores the growing emphasis on AI-driven insights in the tech industry, often at the expense of user and employee privacy considerations.

Key Takeaways

Meta is installing new software on its US employees' computers that will track their keystrokes and mouse movements to train its AI, and it's sparking backlash within the company, according to internal communications obtained by Business Insider.

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Business Insider obtained the full internal announcement about the launch of the new AI training program. The post says that the software helps AI models improve how humans actually use computers, such as using keyboard shortcuts and choosing from dropdown menus. Reuters first reported on the new tracking software.

"For agents to understand how people actually complete everyday tasks using computers, we need to train our models on real examples," the post said.

"This makes me super uncomfortable. How do we opt out?" was the top-rated comment in response to the internal announcement, according to a post on Meta's internal workplace communications site seen by Business Insider.

The "angry-face" emoji was the most common reaction to the original announcement.

Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth responded in the thread that "there is no option to opt out of this on your work provided laptop." This comment received a mix of crying, shocked, and angry-face emojis.

"There are safeguards in place to protect sensitive content, and the data is not used for any other purpose," a Meta spokesperson told Business Insider.

Across the company, Meta has been going all-in internally on AI, forming a Meta Superintelligence Labs unit last year, launching AI Weeks, and reorganizing staff into "AI pods."

While employees can't opt out of the tracking software program, Meta employees' work on their work devices has long been monitored, and staff are informed of that when they sign on, so the new program is more an extension of existing rules than a brand-new policy shift, according to a person familiar with the matter.

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