LinkedIn lawsuit over use of customer data for AI models is dismissed

LinkedIn lawsuit over use of customer data for AI models is dismissed

Written by Jonathan Stempble

(Reuters) – The proposed collective action accused of LinkedIn from Microsoft was rejected of violating the privacy of millions of distinguished clients by revealing their own messages to train obstetric artificial intelligence models.

Prosecutor Alessandro de la Tori on Thursday made a notice of dismissal without bias at the San Jose Court, California, nine days after the prosecution of LinkedIn, and after the company said that the case had no advantage.

De La Torre accused the social media platform that focuses on business to break the promise using personal customer data only to improve its services, by sharing customer messages with third parties to participate in artificial intelligence.

Al -Shakawi said that LinkedIn revealed the unauthorized participation when updating its privacy policy in September, and said that preparing a new account to prevent data from sharing will not affect the training of previous artificial intelligence.

“I have left the late LinkedIn here, consumers, who are truly interested and confused about what has been used to train artificial intelligence,” said Eli Wadi Skukat, the administrative partner of Edleson B, who represented de la Tori, in an email on Friday.

He added: “Users can comfort, at least, that LinkedIn showed us evidence that he did not use their own messages to do so.” “We appreciate the professionalism of LinkedIn.”

In the LinkedIn post on Thursday, Sarah White, lawyer and deputy president of the company, confirmed that LinkedIn did not reveal private customer messages to train artificial intelligence. “We have never done it,” she said.

(Participated in the reports of Jonathan Stempble in New York; edited by Bill Berkerut)

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