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Advocacy group threatens Meta with injunction over use of EU data for AI training

Advocacy group threatens Meta with injunction over use of EU data for AI training

Time of India14-05-2025

HighlightsThe Austrian advocacy group None of Your Business is seeking an injunction against Meta Platforms, which could result in billion-euro damages if the company uses European users' personal data for artificial intelligence model training. Privacy activist Max Schrems criticized Meta's claim of 'legitimate interest' for using users' data, referencing a previous European Court of Justice ruling that found Meta could not use this rationale for targeted advertising. None of Your Business set a deadline of May 21 for Meta to respond and suggested that the company could offer users an opt-in option for data use, as well as comply with EU privacy regulations by utilizing anonymized data.
Austrian advocacy group
NOYB
said on Wednesday it would seek an injunction against Meta Platforms that could lead to
billion-euro damages
claims if the tech giant goes ahead with plans to use Europeans' personal data to train its artificial intelligence models.
NOYB (none of your business), led by privacy activist Max
Schrems
, said it had sent a cease and desist letter on Wednesday to Meta which plans to start using personal data from European users of Instagram and Facebook from May 27.
Meta has cited a legitimate interest under EU privacy rules for using users' data to train and develop its generative AI models and other AI tools, which can be shared with third parties.
The U.S. tech giant said last month that users would receive a link to a form where they can object to their data being used for training purposes and that private messages and public data from accounts of users under the age of 18 will not be used in the training.
Schrems criticised Meta's rationale.
"The European Court of Justice has already held that Meta cannot claim a 'legitimate interest' in targeting users with advertising. How should it have a 'legitimate interest' to suck up all data for AI training?" he said in a statement.
"We are currently evaluating our options to file injunctions, but there is also the option for a subsequent class action for non-material damages. If you think about the more than 400 million European Meta users who could all demand damages of just 500 euros or so, you can do the math," Schrems said.
NOYB said an injunction could be filed under the EU Collective Redress which enables consumers to pursue collective lawsuits against companies in the bloc. It set a May 21 deadline for Meta to respond.
NOYB, which last year called on EU privacy enforcers to act, said Meta could give users an option to opt-in rather than opt-out and also provide clear conditions for AI training such as using anonymised user data, in line with EU privacy rules.

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