Companies building AI-powered tech are using your posts. Hereā€™s how to opt out | Artificial intelligence (AI)

by Pelican Press
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Companies building AI-powered tech are using your posts. Hereā€™s how to opt out | Artificial intelligence (AI)

Welcome to Opt Out, a semi-regular column in which we help you navigate your online privacy and show you how to say no to surveillance. If youā€™d like to skip to a section about a particular site or social network, click the ā€œJump toā€ menu at the top of this article.

The competition to make the latest, greatest, most advanced artificial intelligence thing has turned an already data-hungry tech industry ravenous. Companies looking to build out their AI-powered search engines, smart email composers or chatbots are scraping your posts and personal data and using them to train those systems, which need ever-increasing amounts of text and images.

Even if you havenā€™t opted in to letting them use your data to train their AI, some companies have opted you in by default. Figuring out how to stop them from hoovering up your data to train their AI isnā€™t exactly intuitive. Left to their own devices, more than 300,000 Instagram users have posted a message on their stories in recent days stating they do not give Meta permission to use any of their personal information to inform their AI. To be clear, just like the Facebook statuses of yore, a simple Instagram post will not do anything to stop Meta from using your data in this way.

A viral Instagram chain message claims to prohibit Meta from using your posts to train its AI. Photograph: Blake Montgomery/Instagram

Default opt-ins are an industry-wide issue. A recent report by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on the data practices of nine social media and streaming platforms including WhatsApp, Facebook, YouTube and Amazon found that nearly all of them fed peopleā€™s personal information into automated systems with no comprehensive or transparent way for users to opt out.

ā€œOverall, there was a lack of access, choice, control, transparency, explainability and interpretability relating to the companiesā€™ use of automated systems,ā€ the FTC report reads.

In most cases, you can opt out. If you use tech companiesā€™ sites and apps, they will likely still collect your data, but you can prevent it from being fed into their automation machines.

To make it easier for you, weā€™ve gone through the painstaking process of figuring out how to pull your data out of the hungry AI machine on a bunch of the major platforms so you donā€™t have to wade through endless settings and blocks of text to figure it out yourself.

While some opt-out processes were straightforward once we knew what we were looking for, others were much more convoluted. By far, Meta was the most difficult platform on which to find ways to protect our data. And if youā€™re in the US, there is currently no way to stop the company from training its AI on your information.

Some other sites didnā€™t offer any ways to opt out. For instance, there are no visible settings on YouTube or Reddit that would allow us to protect our posts and content from being used to train the companiesā€™ own AI or other firmsā€™ models because of the public nature of those platforms. Another thing to remember: even if you refuse to permit AI models to train themselves on your personal information or posts, any AI chatbot will likely add the prompts you feed it to its corpus of training data.

Gmail

Google-owned Gmail offers a product called Smart Compose, a predictive text machine that uses your own emails, chats and video content to help figure out what you might say next. You may have noticed it if youā€™ve ever seen suggested sentences or words pop up as youā€™re typing out an email. This content is automatically used to ā€œpersonalizeā€ your experience across Google products, not just in your email. Think Google Docs, Google Slides and YouTube. Itā€™s unclear whether and how your email and chat content is being shared with third-party advertisers or entities. Itā€™s even less clear whether that data is being used to inform how other peopleā€™s emails are personalized.

Gmailā€™s Smart Compose. Photograph: Gmail

You can, however, opt out of letting Google use your email and chat data to train Smart Compose. You can do this easily from your desktop browser or the Gmail app on your phone.

Desktop browser:

Find your settings ā€“ itā€™s a button that looks like a gear at the top right corner of your inbox. This will pop out a a menu bar called Quick Settings. Click on ā€œsee all settingsā€ below that.

Then scroll down to ā€œsmart features and personalizationā€. To the right of that, there will be a button that says ā€œturn on smart features and personalizationā€. If you havenā€™t already opted out, it will be clicked on by default. Uncheck the box. This will turn off all ā€œsmartā€ features, including Googleā€™s ability to use your email content to personalize ads shown to you.

Gmail settings. Photograph: Gmail

iPhone:

In your Gmail app, tap on the buttons with three lines to the left of the search bar. That will pull out a menu that starts with ā€œall inboxesā€. Scroll down to Settings, which is in the last section of that menu. This will bring you to a new Settings page.

Scroll down to Data Privacy. Once you click on that, turn off smart features and personalization. It will show you a pop-up of all the features you will be turning off. Click ā€œturn off featuresā€.

Google Docs

Google Docs tool menu. Photograph: Google docs

Once youā€™ve opted out of letting your email and other data be used in Smart Features, head on over to Google Docs, where the company has also automatically enabled predictive text.

To disable this, youā€™ll have to open a new document. From the document page, scroll over to ā€œtoolsā€ in the top menu under the title of the document. Scroll down to ā€œpreferencesā€. There, you can disable Smart Compose, Smart Reply and other smart features.

LinkedIn

LinkedIn menu. Photograph: LinkedIn

As of two weeks ago, with little heads-up, LinkedIn automatically opted users in to letting their personal data and content train generative AI models. If you decide to remain opted in, your data will also be used to train the generative AI models of LinkedIn affiliates ā€“ a term the company does not expand on. But you can opt out!

A word to the wise: LinkedIn says opting out will not have any bearing on whether your direct interactions with any AI features will be used to train it, so keep that in mind as you use any LinkedIn AI features.

LinkedInā€™s generative AI option. Photograph: LinkedIn

From the home page on either the mobile app or desktop browser, click on the icon of your profile picture. On your desktop it will be in the top right corner and will be labeled ā€œmeā€. On your mobile app it will be in the left corner. There youā€™ll scroll down to settings, which will bring you to a second menu. In the browser, itā€™ll say ā€œsettings and privacyā€. In the mobile app, youā€™ll click on ā€œdata privacy.ā€

In the first section on that page, ā€œhow LinkedIn uses your dataā€, the last option will say ā€œdata for generative AI improvementā€. Click that and toggle the switch off.

Okay, this one was a doozy.

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The first thing to know is that if youā€™re in the US, you can only request that the company delete your personal information that you included in your chats with Metaā€™s generative AI machine. There is not a button to just shut it off, and in the US and many countries outside of the EU and UK where there are fewer comprehensive privacy regulations, you actually have no way to opt out.

From settings and privacy on Instagram, scroll to last section and click ā€˜aboutā€™. Photograph: Instagram

The second thing to know is that trying to find the form to request that Meta delete your data is incredibly convoluted, not at all obvious and required reading through huge chunks of text. I even had trouble retracing my steps. I felt dejected. If you want to skip all the steps and go straight to the form, fortunately we were able to get you a direct link.

Click here to get directly to the form.

If youā€™re in the US and interested in trying to find it yourself, go to your settings from the Instagram app (it should be in the top right corner of your profile). From there, go to ā€œsettings and privacyā€ and scroll down to the section that says ā€œmore info and supportā€ (the last section). Hit the ā€œaboutā€ button. Then go to the privacy policy. Once youā€™re on that page, click on the menu button on the right.

From there, click on ā€œother policies and articlesā€, which will give you a few options. You want to tap on ā€œhow Meta uses information for generative AI models and featuresā€. This will bring you to a very densely worded post detailing how Meta uses your information for generative AI. Now, youā€™ll have to scroll down to the ā€œprivacy and generative AIā€ section. At the end of the sixth paragraph in that section there is a link that says ā€œLearn more and submit your requests here.ā€ Thatā€™s where youā€™ll find the form.

Click on the menu on the top right of privacy policy and click ā€˜other policies and articlesā€™. Then click ā€˜how Meta uses information for generative AI models and featuresā€™. Photograph: Instagram menu options

If you donā€™t want to go through all that mess, hereā€™s the direct link that, at least for the time being, will bring you straight to the request form. Unfortunately, the burden to protect your data is still squarely on your shoulders and, depending on your local laws, thereā€™s no way to completely stop the company from using it to train their AI. Meta specifically says that it will not automatically fulfill your requests to delete your personal information from its AI systems just because you submitted the form. The request form also asks for screenshots and proof that your personal information appeared in responses to prompts you sent to any of Metaā€™s AI models. It is unclear why Meta does not keep track of whose data it uses and when and why the onus is on you to provide that evidence.

We have submitted some requests without any screenshots or proof to see how the company will respond. We will update when we get a response.

If youā€™re in the US, you can click here to get directly to the form.

Scroll to the ā€œprivacy and generative AIā€ section. Click ā€œlearn more and submit your requests hereā€. Photograph: Instagram menu options

If youā€™re in the EU or UK, where there are stronger privacy laws, you can go to your settings from your Instagram account. It should be in the top right corner of your profile. From there go to settings and privacy and scroll down to the section that says ā€œmore info and supportā€, the last section. Hit the ā€œaboutā€ button. Then go to the privacy policy and click on ā€œlearn more about your right to objectā€.

Even in the EU and UK, that form does not automatically shut off Metaā€™s ability to use your data to train its AI. The form only promises that the company wonā€™t use your public information from Facebook and Instagram for its AI features ā€œif your objection is honouredā€. The company also says it may still use information about you to improve or develop its AI even if you donā€™t use their products or otherwise object to its use. An example Meta gives includes if your face shows up in pictures that someone else has posted on Facebook.

X

Okay, we are back in the world where you can just click a few buttons to control how your data is used. Or at least make the attempt. There are still a lot of menus to navigate, but itā€™s definitely easier to opt out of AI training on X than it is over at Meta.

Desktop browser:

To the left of your feed, there is a menu that starts with ā€œhomeā€. Click ā€œmoreā€ at the bottom of that menu and then click on ā€œsettings and privacyā€. Then click on ā€œprivacy and safetyā€, which is the sixth menu item. Scroll down to the second section, ā€œdata sharing and personalizatonā€, and click on Grok. Uncheck the button. This will stop allowing X to use your posts and interactions to train its generative AI systems.

Mobile app:

Make sure your app is updated. Tap your profile icon and click ā€œsettings and supportā€. Scroll down to ā€œprivacy and safetyā€. In the second section, ā€œdata sharing and personalizationā€, the last option will say ā€œGrokā€. Click that and then toggle the button off.

Snap

Snapchat has a chatbot called My AI that is powered by OpenAI and uses information you share with the app to train it. As with other platforms, if you engage with the chatbot directly, that information may be retained and used to train it. But thereā€™s other data, including your location, that is being used to inform the chatbot depending on your settings on the app.

If you share your location with Snapchat generally, that location will also be used by My AI, according to the companyā€™s website. If you donā€™t want to give the AI system access to your location, you will have to revoke Snapchatā€™s access to your location. But even once youā€™ve revoked the location permissions, your location information might still be cached by the app, so youā€™ll have to delete your data from My AI.

On iOS:

In your phone settings, scroll down to the list of apps you have downloaded on your phone and click on Snapchat. From there, click on ā€œlocationā€ and hit ā€œneverā€. Then youā€™ll want to open the Snapchat app. Click on your profile picture, then click on the settings icon in the top right corner of the page. Scroll down to ā€œprivacy controlsā€ and click on ā€œclear dataā€. Then click on ā€œclear my AI dataā€.

On Android:

After long-pressing on the Snapchat icon, tap ā€œapp infoā€ then ā€œpermissionsā€ then hit ā€œlocationā€. Then choose ā€œdenyā€. Then, similar to on iOS, youā€™ll need to go into the app, click on your profile picture and open up the settings menu. From there, scroll to ā€œaccount actionsā€ and tap ā€œclear my AI dataā€.

My AI has also been accessing your Snapchat story by default. If you want to revoke that access, go to the chat tab in your Snapchat app and click on the conversation with My AI. Tap on the My AI profile picture and click on the settings icon in the top right corner (it is three dots). Click on privacy settings and toggle off the button next to ā€œmy storyā€.



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