Thumbnail 1679700
thumbnail
Large (256x256)

Articles

Meta is making its Llama AI models available to more governments in Europe and Asia
Meta is allowing more governments to access its suite of Llama AI models. The group includes France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and South Korea and organizations associated with the European Union and NATO, the company said in an update.The move comes after the company took similar steps last year to bring Llama to the US government and its contractors. Meta has also made its AI models available to the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand for "national security use cases."Meta notes that governments won't just be using the company's off-the-shelf models. They'll also be able to incorporate their own data and create AI applications for specific use cases. "Governments can also fine-tune Llama models using their own sensitive national security data, host them in secure environments at various levels of classification, and deploy models tailored for specific purposes on-device in the field," the company says.Meta says the open source nature of Llama makes it ideally suited for government use as "it can be securely downloaded and deployed without the need to transfer sensitive data through third-party AI providers." Recently, Mark Zuckerberg has suggested that "safety concerns" could potentially prevent Meta from open-sourcing its efforts around building "real superintelligence."This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/meta-is-making-its-llama-ai-models-available-to-more-governments-in-europe-and-asia-134621319.html?src=rss
Meta is bringing new facial recognition tools to the UK, EU and South Korea
Meta is expanding its use of facial recognition in Europe, the UK and South Korea to crack down on accounts that impersonate public figures. The new facial recognition-powered safety features are now live on Facebook in the regions and will expand to Instagram in the coming months.The technology was initially put to use last year starting in the US, helping to identify ads that fraudulently use a celebrity's likeness as well as to help people regain access to hacked accounts. Public figures opt in to this program in Europe, which is also being rolled out in South Korea alongside the new protections against impersonation. This new use case is aimed at scammers who pose as public figures to trick unsuspecting users into sending money or other scams of that nature."We'll now use facial recognition technology to compare the profile picture on the suspicious account to the real public figure's Facebook and Instagram profile pictures. If there's a match, we will remove the impostor account," said a Meta spokesperson.In addition to the US rollout, the company's facial recognition technology has been used to aid account recovery in the UK, EU and South Korea since March. This came three years after Facebook decided to shut down its facial recognition system on Facebook, due in large part to public backlash against the technology.The social media giant touts the benefits of these tools, reporting that in the first half of 2025, user reports of "celebrity bait" ads dropped by 22 percent globally. Facial recognition remains a controversial technology, with differing public opinion on its use in law enforcement and the workplace.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/meta-is-bringing-new-facial-recognition-tools-to-the-uk-eu-and-south-korea-185303065.html?src=rss
Dutch court orders Meta to change its Facebook and Instagram timelines
A court in the Netherlands has ordered Meta to change Facebook and Instagram's timelines, after finding that the element ran afoul of the European Union's Digital Services Act (DSA). As reported by Reuters, the Dutch court said that the company needs to provide users with simpler options - namely ones that don't rely on an algorithm."People in the Netherlands are not sufficiently able to make free and autonomous choices about the use of profiled recommendation systems," the court said in its decision. It ruled that the timeline must honor a user's choice of chronological order or other non-profiled options, instead of reverting to the algorithm-driven version whenever a user closes and reopens either app.The case was brought by Bits of Freedom, a Dutch digital rights group. "It is unacceptable that a few American tech billionaires can determine how we view the world," said the group's spokesperson, Maartje Knaap.Meta said it will appeal the decision, and that these DSA issues should be handled by the European Commission and other EU regulators, not by the courts of individual nations. "Proceedings like this threaten the digital single market and the harmonized regulatory regime that should underpin it," a Meta spokesperson said. Meta faces a potential fine of $117,450 for every day it fails to comply with the court's order, up to a maximum of $5.8 million.The DSA has been a common thorn in the side of big tech companies since its approval in 2022. The European Commission has levied hundreds of millions of dollars in fines against the likes of Apple, Meta and Alphabet for violations of the DSA. The regulations have also been used to effect certain changes on these platforms in the name of privacy, data security and the protection of minors.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/dutch-court-orders-meta-to-change-its-facebook-and-instagram-timelines-185106583.html?src=rss
1