| (moderator: please, don’t delete this comment again, everybody is commenting without knowing what Meta did) Meta spared no expenses to hide the opt-out page. The agency says that: “there were excessive and unjustified obstacles to accessing information and exercising this right”. This was one of the main reasons that obligated the agency to act. The steps to get to the hidden opt-out page are bellow, obligating users to read the privacy policy to find a link buried deep down in the text, and requiring 2FA by email to opt out even for already logged in users - they should require 2FA to log in, not to opt out of AI training. There is no justification to require all this: * Access your profile and go to the settings section, signaled by three bars in the top right corner * Click on "about" at the bottom of the page * Select the privacy policy. On this new page, the three bars in the top right corner lead to the privacy center * Click on the arrow next to other policies and articles and select the option "How Meta uses information for generative AI features and models" * In the nineteenth paragraph, not counting topics, is the "right to object" option. Click on it. * Fill in and send the form. Meta confirms your identity with a numerical code sent to the email address registered on your account. Then just wait for the opt-out to be confirmed. This can take a few minutes. |