谷歌否认其读取 Gmail 邮件以训练人工智能的说法。
Google Denies Claims That It's Reading Gmails To Train Its AI

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/google-denies-claims-its-reading-gmails-train-its-ai

谷歌正在积极否认有关其使用私人Gmail内容来训练Gemini AI模型的病毒式说法。这场争议源于谷歌最近更改了Gmail中“智能功能”设置的呈现方式,导致了广泛的误解。 多家公司(如MalwareBytes)和流行的社交媒体帖子错误地暗示用户被自动选择加入用于AI训练的数据使用。MalwareBytes发布了更正声明,承认了他们最初的误解。 谷歌坚持认为,关于数据使用没有设置更改,用户数据仍然是私密的。虽然“智能功能”(如智能撰写和过滤)已经存在多年,但谷歌明确表示,在未经许可的情况下,Gmail内容不会被用于训练Gemini。 数据*可能*会被匿名化和汇总,以改进诸如提示建议之类的功能,但会受到严格的隐私控制。用户可以在Gmail设置中管理“智能功能”,选择启用或禁用它们。

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原文

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Google is denying viral claims that private Gmail emails are being used to train its AI models.

An illustration of a mobile phone and laptop with the Google website, on Dec. 14, 2020. Laurie Dieffembacq/BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images

The announcement follows multiple reports this past week that the company has rolled out such features.

In a post issued on Nov. 21, Gmail said that it wanted to “set the record straight on recent misleading reports.” It listed several points, saying, “We have not changed anyone’s settings,” Gmail’s “smart features” have existed for years, and, “We do not use your Gmail content to train our Gemini AI model.”

“We are always transparent and clear if we make changes to our terms [and] policies,” Google said.

The claims about Google included a post from cybersecurity company MalwareBytes, about which the company later issued a correction. Separately, a post on X from a YouTube content creator received around 150,000 likes. It contained similar claims that users were automatically opted into allowing Google to use Gmail emails to train its AI models.

“We’ve updated this article after realizing we contributed to a perfect storm of misunderstanding around a recent change in the wording and placement of Gmail’s smart features,” MalwareBytes said in its correction.

The settings themselves aren’t new, but the way Google recently rewrote and surfaced them led a lot of people (including us) to believe Gmail content might be used to train Google’s AI models, and that users were being opted in automatically.”

The company noted that “after taking a closer look at Google’s documentation and reviewing other reporting, that doesn’t appear to be the case.”

Google has maintained on several of its blogs that it would protect user privacy regarding its Gemini AI models.

“Your data stays in Workspace,” says a company policy page. “We do not use your Workspace data to train or improve the underlying generative AI and large language models that power Gemini, Search, and other systems outside of Workspace without permission.”

It adds that for some features, including “accepting or rejecting spelling suggestions, or reporting spam,” suggestions are rendered anonymous or aggregated and could be used in “new features we are currently developing, like improved prompt suggestions that help Workspace users get the best results from Gemini features.”

These features are developed with strict privacy protections that keep users in control,” the company  says.

The smart features program for Gmail allows automated email filtering or categorization, automated composition of text in email, or suggests quick replies to emails, according to the company.

To determine whether the features are turned on or off, users can open Gmail on a desktop or mobile app and click on the gear icon before proceeding to See All Settings on desktop or Settings on mobile.

Then they can go to a section called smart features in Gmail, Chat, and Meet. To turn the features on or off, users can check or uncheck the box that says “Turn on smart features in Gmail, Chat, and Meet.”

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