Meta unveils Muse Spark AI with Contemplating mode
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The ads had been designed to find users of Meta products to join the growing number of lawsuits targeting the social-media giant.
A new report claims that Meta, Facebook’s parent company, has begun pulling ads from attorneys on the platform who are seeking clients who have been harmed on social media as a minor. It’s the latest chapter in Facebook’s ongoing litigation issue regarding safeguards for underage users on its platform.
Meta’s most important launch in years may not be its latest Ray-Ban glasses or its AI app. Instead, it could be the new AI model it introduced on Wednesday, hinting at how its billions in AI investments could one day transform its products.
A former worker at Meta is under criminal investigation after allegedly downloading thousands of users’ private photographs on Facebook.
Meta debuted its first major large language model, Muse Spark, spearheaded by chief AI officer Alexandr Wang, who leads Meta Superintelligence Labs.
The former employee was fired from Meta after being suspected of downloading 30,000 photos, the company said.
The company behind Facebook and Instagram has lost two major court cases and appears to be scaling back on the virtual reality Metaverse.
Late last month, Meta was handed back-to-back defeats in two landmark social media trials, a New Mexico case accusing Meta of endangering children by enabling sexual predators on Instagram and a Los Angeles-based social media addiction case.
Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird accuses the social media company of violating consumer protection laws by promoting Instagram as safe for children despite explicit content and addictive design.
Meta is fighting back as attackers continue to target Facebook, Messenger and WhatsApp users. Here’s what you need to know.
Delhi HC lets Meta challenge a CCPA fine, but key questions on platform liability and e-commerce rules remain unresolved.