No longer content to subsume recognizable intellectual properties, the majority of the indexed internet and books (basically all of them), AI will apparently now begin devouring its own workforce.
A report in Reuters alleged that the keystrokes, mouse movements and clicks of Meta’s workforce are to be captured for the purposes of training AI — something the company’s communications department was happy to confirm as accurate! In a cheery missive, a company spokesperson told Engadget that “If we’re building agents to help people complete everyday tasks using computers, our models need real examples of how people actually use them […] we’re launching an internal tool that will capture these kinds of inputs on certain applications to help us train our models.”
All this leads one to ask the obvious question: hey, what the fuck?
The nature of at-will employment in the United States is such that your boss basically never needs to explain why your job duties change, but it’s rarely so sweeping, so brazen or so unavoidably tied to the reminder that you are being surveilled at a frighteningly granular level. Gross!
Installing keyloggers on someone else’s computer in a non-work setting can often constitute a criminal offense (hello CFAA!) and it’s frankly weird we allow this sort of thing to happen in the workplace at all. But in this case, there’s at least some possibility this data may eventually be used to replace the exact people currently strongarmed into making those clicks and clacking those keys — or as a thin excuse to lay a lot of them off.
It’s not as though the data underpinning large language models is worthless. Ill-gotten information has been the subject of exorbitant settlements and many pending court cases with considerable sums riding on their eventual judgements. If Meta thought it could obtain this sort of data from its estimated 3.5 billion combined users instead of its comparably paltry body of employees without it immediately reading as the single most invasive chapter in a laughably long history of move fast, break things, and never admit to the mess, wouldn’t it just… do that? Technology has progressed so far, yet people continue to really hate feeling taken advantage of. And that sort of thing is still bad for business.
In a fragile economy floated by rampant self-dealing and the shifting moods of a few very rich weirdos, even the mere mention of AI’s relentless forward march to annihilate its own creators can make a shoe company’s stock pop, however briefly.
Maybe that’s why Meta was delighted to confirm the broad details of the Reuters story, yet declined multiple requests to comment on if workers can opt out of this surveillance, or if they are being compensated in any way for their data. I, for one, would still love to know!
Do you work at Meta and want to talk confidentially? I’m @amarae.60 on Signal.
