Meta will reportedly withhold multimodal AI models from the EU amid regulatory uncertainty

Date:

Share:


Meta has decided to not offer its upcoming multimodal AI model and future versions to customers in the European Union citing a lack of clarity from European regulators, according to a report by Axios. The models in question are designed to process not only text but also images and audio, and power AI capabilities in Meta platforms as well as the company’s Ray-Ban smart glasses.

“We will release a multimodal Llama model over the coming months, but not in the EU due to the unpredictable nature of the European regulatory environment,” Meta said in a statement to Axios.

Meta’s move follows a similar decision by Apple, which recently announced it would not release its Apple Intelligence features in Europe due to regulatory concerns. Margrethe Vesteger, the EU’s competition commissioner, had slammed Apple’s move, saying that the company’s decision was a “stunning, open declaration that they know 100 percent that this is another way of disabling competition where they have a stronghold already.” Tech Reader has reached out to Vesteger for comment on Meta’s decision.

Withholding Meta’s multimodal AI models from the EU could have far-reaching implications — it means that any companies that use them to build their products and services would be unable to offer them in Europe.

Meta told Axios that it still plans to release Llama 3, the company’s upcoming text-only model in the EU. The company’s primary concern stems from the challenges of training AI models using data from European customers while complying with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the EU’s existing data protection law. In May, Meta announced that it planned to use publicly available posts from Facebook and Instagram users to train future AI models but was forced to stop doing so in the EU after receiving pushback from data privacy regulators in the region. At the time, Meta defended its actions, saying that being able to train its models on the data of European users was necessary to reflect local culture and terminology.

“If we don’t train our models on the public content that Europeans share on our services and others, such as public posts or comments, then models and the AI features they power won’t accurately understand important regional languages, cultures or trending topics on social media,” the company said in a blog post. “We believe that Europeans will be ill-served by AI models that are not informed by Europe’s rich cultural, social and historical contributions.”

Despite its reservations about releasing its multimodal models in the EU, Meta still plans to launch them in the UK, which has similar data protection laws to the EU. The company argued that European regulators are taking longer to interpret existing laws compared to their counterparts in other regions.



Source link

━ more like this

Vivo to unsettle iPhone 17 Pro and Galaxy S26 Ultra with DSLR-level tech on its next

Vivo’s product manager Han Boxiao took to Weibo this week to talk telephoto cameras, and what he described sounds less like a smartphone...

Capcom’s long-delayed Pragmata is now arriving a week earlier

Capcom during its March 5 Spotlight showcase that Pragmata, its dystopian sci-fi adventure game, will release on April 17 for PlayStation...

Motorola’s upcoming Razr 70 foldable could get a camera and memory boost

Motorola hasn’t said a word officially, but China’s TENAA certification database (via Gadgets360) has done the talking anyway. The Motorola Razr 70 has...

T-Mobile 5G Home Internet’s latest deal gives you up to $300 back 

If you’ve been considering a switch from traditional cable, T-Mobile 5G Home Internet’s newest promotion may be the most compelling reason yet to make the move. The...

Rad Power Bikes gets a new owner, pledge to build bikes in the US

Life EV has completed a court-approved acquisition of Rad Power Bikes, granting a second life to the troubled e-bike brand.The Florida-based Life EV...
spot_img