LinkedIn sued for using messages to train AI
The lawsuit was filed in the San Jose, California, federal court on behalf of LinkedIn Premium customers who sent or received InMail messages, and whose private information was disclosed to third parties for AI training before 18 September
Arab News
CALIFORNIA, 23 JAN
Microsoft’s LinkedIn has been sued by
Premium customers who said the business-focused social media platform disclosed
their private messages to third parties without permission to train generative
artificial intelligence models.
According to a proposed class action filed
on Tuesday night on behalf of millions of LinkedIn Premium customers, LinkedIn
quietly introduced a privacy setting last August that let users enable or
disable the sharing of their personal data.
Customers said LinkedIn then discreetly
updated its privacy policy on Sept. 18 to say data could be used to train AI
models, and in a “frequently asked questions” hyperlink said opting out “does
not affect training that has already taken place.”
This attempt to “cover its tracks” suggests
LinkedIn was fully aware it violated customers’ privacy and its promise to use
personal data only to support and improve its platform, in order to minimize
public scrutiny and legal fallout, the complaint said.
The lawsuit was filed in the San Jose,
California, federal court on behalf of LinkedIn Premium customers who sent or
received InMail messages, and whose private information was disclosed to third
parties for AI training before Sept. 18.
It seeks unspecified damages for breach of
contract and violations of California’s unfair competition law, and $1,000 per
person for violations of the federal Stored Communications Act.
LinkedIn said in a statement: “These are
false claims with no merit.”
A lawyer for the plaintiffs had no
immediate additional comment.
The lawsuit was filed several hours after
US President Donald Trump announced a joint venture among Microsoft-backed
OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank, with a potential $500 billion of investment, to
build AI infrastructure in the United States.
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