
-
Bayern forced to watch on as home final dream 'shattered'
-
Trump clashes with Fed chief Powell over interest rates
-
UK mulls impact of landmark gender ruling
-
'Help us,' says wife of Gaza medic missing since ambulance attack
-
Stocks diverge as ECB rate cut looms, Trump tussles with Fed
-
Somalia air strikes, combat kill dozens of jihadists: govt
-
Book claims Vatican knew French charity icon accused of abuse from 1950s
-
Afrobeats star Davido sees Nigeria's star rising
-
Van Dijk signs new Liverpool contract
-
Gaza rescuers say 37 people killed in Israeli strikes, most of them displaced
-
Strongest 'hints' yet of life detected on distant planet
-
EU hopes Trump tariffs can nudge Mercosur deal past finish line
-
Nvidia CEO in Beijing as US tech curbs, trade war threaten sales
-
Sexton moves into coaching role with Ireland and Lions
-
Italy's Meloni in Washington seeking EU tariff deal from Trump
-
UN nuclear chief in Tehran ahead of fresh Iran-US talks
-
Silent killing fields 50 years on from Khmer Rouge atrocities
-
Ancelotti exposed as Real Madrid struggle to accommodate Mbappe
-
Rubio in Paris to meet Macron on Ukraine war
-
Philippine film legend Nora Aunor dies aged 71
-
Cartel recruitment at heart of Mexico's missing persons crisis
-
Macron to hold Ukraine war talks with Rubio, Witkoff in Paris
-
Mahrang Baloch, a child of the resistance for Pakistan's ethnic minority
-
Myanmar junta says to free nearly 5,000 prisoners in amnesty
-
Taiwan's TSMC says net profit rose 60.3% in first quarter
-
Hermes to hike US prices to offset tariff impact
-
Sri Lanka's women-run hotel breaks down barriers
-
Sweden turns up Eurovision heat with wacky sauna song
-
Sweden goes into Eurovision as punters' favourite
-
Spanish youth keep vibrant Holy Week processions alive
-
Eurovision promises glitz -- and controversy over Israel
-
Italy's Meloni heads to White House seeking EU tariff deal
-
F1 on Jeddah's streets - talking points ahead of the Saudi Arabian GP
-
Changing face of war puts Denmark on drone offensive
-
Anger as China club plays hours after striker Boupendza's death
-
Chinese investment sparks rise of Mandarin in Cambodia
-
Unease grows over Trump tariffs despite 'progress' in Japan trade talks
-
Nigerian mixed-faith families sense danger as violence flares
-
Asian markets boosted by 'Big Progress' in Japan tariff talks
-
No room for sentiment as Hinault returns to site of world title glory
-
ECB ready to cut rates again as Trump tariffs shake eurozone
-
Heat scorch Bulls to keep playoff dream alive
-
Nigeria, Niger foreign ministers meet for security talks
-
Rugby Australia hits out at French clubs poaching young talent
-
Canada PM Carney avoids French blunder as he faces attack in key debate
-
El Salvador becoming 'black hole' for US deportees, critics fear
-
Trump admin proposes redefining 'harm' to endangered animals
-
Australia's Mary Fowler set for long lay-off after ACL injury
-
Rubio to meet French leaders for talks on Ukraine
-
Webb spots strongest 'hints' yet of life on distant planet

Meta to train AI models on European users' public data
Meta will train its artificial intelligence (AI) models with its European users' public content and conversations with the Meta AI chatbot, the firm said on Monday.
The decision represents a major volte-face from the Facebook and Instagram owner, which has previously appeared wary of the European Union's stringent regulations on the use of personal data.
People based in the EU who use Meta platforms can opt out of having their data used for generative AI training purposes, the social networking giant said.
That means everything from Instagram photo captions to Facebook comments could soon be fair game for Meta AI, which the Mark Zuckerberg-owned company hopes will overtake market-leader ChatGPT.
"This training will better support millions of people and businesses in Europe, by teaching our generative AI models to better understand and reflect their cultures, languages and history," the firm said in a statement.
WhatsApp messenger will for the time being not be affected by the changes.
The changes would not apply to the accounts of users under 18, nor to private messages of users to family and friends, the tech giant added on social media.
Of the opt-out form, Meta said it had made it "easy to find, read, and use" and would honour all objections already or yet to be made.
- 'American technology leadership' -
Though AI has revolutionary potential, critics point to its inherent ethical pitfalls, ability to wreak destructive upheaval, and the energy-guzzling technology's potential contribution to climate change.
When Meta AI first launched in the EU in late March, the tech giant was at pains to point out that the chatbot was not trained on data from European users.
Its rollout on the continent was delayed by more than a year as a result of overlapping European regulations on emerging technologies, including user data, AI and digital markets.
In Monday's announcement Meta insisted the move was not unique in Europe, arguing it was following the example set by Google and ChatGPT maker OpenAI.
Meta AI was first unveiled for the United States in September 2023, then rolled out across all the group's applications in April 2024.
Although image generation is available in the US, in the EU the generative AI tool will craft text-only responses to users' questions. Meta AI can also draw on web search for its answers.
Developing "large language models" (LLMs) like Meta AI requires vast reserves of data, which is heavily regulated in the European Union where it relates to individual users.
As for other Silicon Valley giants, AI is an overriding priority for Meta.
The group plans to invest $60-65 billion this year, with much of the cash going into data centres, servers and network infrastructure necessary to develop AI models.
At present Meta claims around 700 million monthly active users for its AI assistant -- still somewhat shy of the one billion Zuckerberg has said was needed to secure "a durable long-term advantage".
L.Torres--PC