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Image: Barefoot Communications via Unsplash

Here’s how to stop Facebook using your photos and information to build its AI

Not everyone realises that everything  – yes everything – that you upload to Facebook they pretty much can use as they wish. Sorry to freak you out if you didn’t realise this, you can read more about this below. It’s in their terms and conditions.

Well, on top of that, Meta (who runs Facebook) now wants to use your uploads to build their AI – so they can then make even more money out of your personal data.

If you’re OK with that, that’s all fine and dandy – just stop reading here.

What you can do about it
If you don’t like the idea of your personal photos of your friends, family, even children being used to make Mark Zuckerberg and many, many others even more wealthy than they already are, from using your data, read on.

They haven’t made it very obvious (wonder why?), so here are the steps you need:

Protect your data from Meta’s AI
While logged into Facebook, visit their ‘Privacy’ centre.

Hidden in the block of text that’s near the top of the page that currently starts, “We’re getting ready to expand our AI at Meta experiences”, there’s a link in the second paragraph on the word ‘object’ – click on that.

You’ll be taken to another page currently titled “Object to Your Information Being Used for AI at Meta”.

The email address you use for Facebook should be filled in.

The next field in the form is optional (why give them more data?), so leave it blank.

Then just click the Submit button on the bottom right of the form.

You should then see a box like the one below that says, your data will not be used, “going forward”, so we can but assume that every photo, public posts and comments you’ve ever put on Facebook or Instagram has already been sucked in to their AI – but at least your future personal data should be safe.

Licence Granted to Facebook
By uploading, you give Facebook a non-exclusive, transferable, sub-licensable, royalty-free, worldwide licence to use, distribute, modify, run, copy, publicly perform, or display your content.

This licence ends when you delete your content or your account unless your content has been shared with others and they have not deleted it.

You can read about it in section “3. The permissions you give us” section of Facebook’s terms and conditions.

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VentnorLad
27, September 2024 10:30 am

Here’s how to stop Facebook using your photos and information to build its AI

1 Don’t have a Facebook presence
2 If you do have a Facebook presence, get rid of it.
3 Now you’ve done that, repeat the process for Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, MySpace, etc., etc.

chausettes
Reply to  VentnorLad
27, September 2024 3:18 pm

MySpace?! You are betraying your age VentnorLad! ;)

joe w
Reply to  VentnorLad
28, September 2024 12:21 pm

I recall seeing an interview with a former head of GCHQ. Asked how she kept her information private online she replied that she didn’t do Facebook, Twitter or any other social media. She also only used Duckduckgo as a search engine. As an IT worker since 1970 I have followed the rise of the internet understanding only too well the impact of data and the usefulness and… Read more »

chausettes
27, September 2024 3:19 pm

Thanks for this – really easy to understand and follow – cheers OTW.

Justin Case
27, September 2024 8:28 pm

Closing your FB account does not clear your data – photos, comments, etc. In fact, if you close your account, there is no way to ensure that the data has been scrubbed and you cannot be sure that Meta will act in good faith and delete your data at all. Also worth knowing that Google’s use of your data it ubiquitous. Any data of your that sits… Read more »

Justin Case
Reply to  Justin Case
27, September 2024 8:29 pm

Typos 🙄

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