German court allows Meta to use Facebook and Instagram data
Consumer groups have raised concerns despite a German ruling that supports Meta’s AI data practices.

A German court has ruled in favour of Meta, allowing the tech company to use data from Facebook and Instagram to train AI systems. A Cologne court ruled Meta had not breached the EU law and deemed its AI development a legitimate interest.
According to the court, Meta is permitted to process public user data without explicit consent. Judges argued that training AI systems could not be achieved by other equally effective and less intrusive methods.
They noted that Meta plans to use only publicly accessible data and had taken adequate steps to inform users via its mobile apps.
Despite the ruling, the North Rhine-Westphalia Consumer Advice Centre remains critical, raising concerns about legality and user privacy. Privacy group Noyb also challenged the decision, warning it could take further legal action, including a potential class-action lawsuit.
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