German consumer protection group calls on Meta to halt its AI training in the EU – will other countries follow suit?
Public posts and user interactions are set to feed Meta AI training from May 27. Yet, privacy advocates are questioning its legality.

- A German consumer protection group is calling on Meta to halt its AI training plans in the EU
- All public posts and user interactions are set to feed Meta AI starting from May 27, 2025
- Meta claims the AI training complies with EU law, but privacy advocates still question its legality under GDPR
A German consumer protection group is calling on Meta to halt its plan to start training its AI models with EU users' data.
The Verbraucherzentrale North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) has sent a cease and desist letter to the Big Tech giant on April 30, 2025, to demand that Facebook and Instagram stop their AI training plans. The group also threatens further legal action if Meta decides not to comply.
"It is imperative to act quickly, because once data has been incorporated into AI, it is difficult to retrieve it," said Christine Steffen, data protection expert at the North Rhine-Westphalia Consumer Advice Center, in an official announcement.
All public posts and users' interactions are set to feed Meta AI starting from May 27, 2025. If they don't wish this to happen, EU users need to actively opt out.
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An illegal approach?
Meta, the parent company that owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, successfully launched Meta AI in the EU in March, almost a year after the firm paused the launch amid growing concerns among EU data regulators.
In its official announcement, the company ensures that its approach complies with European laws and regulations. "We welcome the opinion provided by the EDPB in December, which affirmed that our original approach met our legal obligations," Meta wrote.
Specifically, the EDPB opinion provides a guide to help the Irish Data Protection Authority (DPA) assess the use of legitimate interest as a legal basis for AI models.
German consumer experts, however, are now arguing that a reference to legitimate interest is insufficient for Meta AI. They also point out how users should not accept that the personal information they shared with Meta over the years could now be used for AI training.
"Furthermore, it cannot be ruled out that particularly sensitive information, which is particularly protected under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), is also used for AI training purposes," said Steffen. "In that case, a so-called opt-out – as offered by Meta – is not sufficient; those affected would have to actively consent to this."
#Meta Skips Consent, Breaches #GDPR with EU Data AI Training.