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    Home»Business»Meta is using mouse-tracking software on employees. Now they’re pushing back.
    Business 3 Mins Read

    Meta is using mouse-tracking software on employees. Now they’re pushing back.

    Business 3 Mins Read
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    As Meta has poured hundreds of billions of dollars into outpacing its competition in the AI arms race, employees have been forced to get on board with its big bet. Meta employees have been asked to enthusiastically adopt AI and are now evaluated on their AI use in performance reviews. Recurring layoffs have reportedly stoked discontent: According to a recent New York Times report, employees have built websites to count down to another round of rumored job cuts next week. 

    Now the company is also using mouse-tracking software to collect employee data that will help train Meta’s AI models—and employees are not having it. 

    A Reuters report today revealed that an online petition is circulating at the company, and that employees have even posted physical flyers to encourage their colleagues to sign. The flyers were distributed across multiple U.S. offices in meeting rooms and on vending machines, and according to Reuters, included the following language: “Don’t want to work at the Employee Data Extraction Factory?”

    Employees cannot opt out of being tracked by the mouse-tracking software if they are using a company laptop, which has fueled privacy concerns among its workforce and questions about whether they are training AI that will ultimately replace them. But Meta has insisted this data will be a critical part of developing its AI models. “If we’re building agents to help people complete everyday tasks using computers, our models need real examples of how people actually use them—things like mouse movements, clicking buttons, and navigating dropdown menus,” a Meta spokesperson previously told Fast Company. “To help, we’re launching an internal tool that will capture these kinds of inputs on certain applications to help us train our models.” (As for the concerns over privacy, Meta also noted that there were “safeguards in place to protect sensitive content.”)  

    When reached by Fast Company, Meta was not immediately available for comment.

    There has been growing concern over AI-related layoffs, which are becoming routine across the tech industry. (LinkedIn announced job cuts yesterday that will impact 5% of its workforce—right on the heels of layoffs at companies like Coinbase, Cloudflare, and PayPal.) But the dissent at Meta also indicates that employees are organizing in a manner that is more atypical among white-collar tech workers. Employees are not simply incensed by the rapid clip of layoffs; they are openly speaking out against their working conditions. 

    The Times reported that hundreds of employees had sounded off in response to Meta’s plan to track computer usage. The online petition and flyers being distributed at Meta offices even referenced the National Labor Relations Act, according to Reuters, noting that the law protected their right to organize in the workplace “for the improvement of ‌working conditions.” 

    The tech industry has seen an uptick in this kind of employee activism over the last decade. But the dizzying pace of AI adoption at companies like Meta seems to be catalyzing a new wave of protest over issues like workplace monitoring that, until now, have been largely the purview of blue-collar workers. As Fast Company has reported, there is little legal recourse for employees who are subject to this sort of tracking software, as long as it is limited to company devices. 

    There are, however, real ethical concerns over the fact that employees have no choice but to comply with this kind of surveillance—especially in a climate where their jobs are on the line.



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