Meta Tracking Tool Enters Legal Friction with EU Privacy Standards

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An internal Meta software designed to track employee keystrokes and mouse movements for artificial intelligence development faces legal opposition in Europe due to allegations of non-consensual data collection.

NEW YORK/AMSTERDAM, May 29, 2026 : Meta Platforms Inc. is confronting intense scrutiny as internal documentation reveals its newly deployed employee monitoring program captures considerable data from individuals residing outside the United States. This expansion could pull the social media conglomerate into an extensive regulatory battle over European Union privacy protocols.
The system, designated as the Model Capability Initiative, was introduced last month to monitor how U.S. personnel interact with computers. By tracking specific mouse clicks, drop-down selections, and navigation choices across more than 200 software applications, Meta aims to build autonomous AI systems capable of executing everyday office tasks.
Internal documents confirm that the system routinely logs the contents of text communications, chat logs, and emails sent to domestic workers by international counterparties. Legal scholars and digital rights advocacy organizations argue that this inadvertent surveillance violates the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which strictly prevents the secondary use of occupational data without explicit consent.
Staff members have raised formal complaints regarding the operational scope of the software. Internal corporate forums indicate that workers have experienced severe home network degradation, with the application draining monthly internet data caps within days. Technical analyses distributed by personnel show that the tool records clipboard entries, internet history, and operating cycles by piggybacking on existing security infrastructure.

Meta corporate spokespeople stated that the tool is strictly confined to domestic machinery, claiming that potential privacy liabilities were thoroughly vetted prior to release. Regulators at the Irish Data Protection Commission confirm they are evaluating the program’s structure. Legal specialists emphasize that if the data ingestion fails the European Union’s strict purpose-limitation criteria, Meta could face penalties totaling up to four percent of its global annual revenue.
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