Deep search
Rewards
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
2024 Election
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
LinkedIn is using your data to train AI. This is how to opt out
LinkedIn is now accessing user profiles to train artificial intelligence, but the good news is that you can opt out. News 8's Brian Roche walks you through it.
LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram are hoovering up your data to train their AI. Here’s how to stop it
You don’t have to let social media services harvest your data to train their generative AI, as many companies do these days. You can opt out—if you can figure out how. The problem was hammered home last week when tech news site 404Media reported that LinkedIn had started training its AI on its users’ posts by default,
LinkedIn doesn’t get explicit consent for training AI, requiring users to opt out.
If you’re in a country where LinkedIn has started using your data for AI training, it’s easy to stop it. Go to the data privacy section in settings and switch the “Use my data for training content creation AI models” toggle to off.
LinkedIn is training AI with your personal data. Here's how to stop it
Your information and how you interact with LinkedIn is helping to train AI. If you don't want that to happen, you can opt out and check what it already knows.
LinkedIn plans to use your data to train its AI. Here’s how to stop it
Once you are logged into LinkedIn’s website in your browser, click on “Settings and Privacy” under the “Me” tab. Then select “Data Privacy.” From there, look under the “How LinkedIn uses your data” header. At the bottom, you’ll find “Data for Generative AI Improvement.” Click on that and toggle the switch to “Off” to opt out.
LinkedIn is using your data to train AI. Here's how to turn it off.
Click your profile image on the header menu and select Settings & Privacy in the dropdown menu. Select the Data for Generative AI Improvement option at the very bottom of the How LinkedIn uses your data section. Thanks to the EU's strong data privacy laws, LinkedIn is not using EU users' data for its AI training.
LinkedIn has stopped grabbing UK users’ data for AI
The U.K.'s data protection watchdog has confirmed that Microsoft-owned LinkedIn has stopped processing user data for AI model training for now. Stephen
LinkedIn is using your data to train generative AI models. Here's how to opt out.
The data collected for the Generative AI Improvement program is used to “improve or develop the LinkedIn services,” LinkedIn said.
LinkedIn is scraping your data to train AI — here’s how to opt-out
AI is gracing the presence of social media in new ways every day. To stay relevant, LinkedIn has jumped on the bandwagon, too. The Microsoft-owned company, used predominantly by networking professionals, has introduced several AI-driven features.
LinkedIn is training AI on you — unless you opt out with this setting
The professional network now by default grants itself permission to use anything you post to train its artificial intelligence
LinkedIn Trains AI Using User Content Without Notice
The post LinkedIn Trains AI Using User Content Without Notice appeared first on AfroTech. LinkedIn Trains AI Using User Content Without Notice
6d
The LinkedIn AI saga shows us the need for EU-like privacy regulations
Following EU backlash on previous attempts from X and Meta, LinkedIn chose not to use European users' data for training its ...
8d
on MSN
LinkedIn Is Using Your Data to Train AI (but You Can Stop It)
LinkedIn users have noticed a new setting that allows them to stop the company from training its AI with their data—but that ...
2d
LinkedIn has quietly removed those AI-powered prompts that were appearing in the feeds of premium members
Microsoft-owned LinkedIn has quietly removed AI-powered prompt questions that had been appearing in the feeds of premium members.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results
Trending now
Counselor accused of assault
Seeks dismissal of charges
Stadiums to serve as shelters
Chinese submarine sank
Kotb leaving 'Today'
Military recruiting rebounds
Targeted Black residents?
$8B military aid for Ukraine
50/50 ball ownership suit
RU hits Ukraine's power grid
Settles defamation lawsuit
WI duplicate ballot flap
US suicides steady, high
To withdraw sickle cell drug
Boxes to distribute Narcan
NIH finds misconduct
US economy grew
ISR rejects ceasefire talks
Weekly jobless claims fall
On active shooter drills
Disbarred in DC
Capital goods orders up
Rose announces retirement
Jan. 6 report delayed
Arrives in Luxembourg
NC board removes 747K
On Secret Service failures
Urgent safety alert for 737s
More executives leave
Password-sharing crackdown
Feedback