For years, the cost of using âfreeâ services from Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and other Big Tech firms has been handing over your data. Uploading your life into the cloud and using free tech brings conveniences, but it puts personal information in the hands of giant corporations that will often be looking to monetize it. Now, the next wave of generative AI systems are likely to want more access to your data than ever before.
Over the past two years, generative AI toolsâsuch as OpenAIâs ChatGPT and Googleâs Geminiâhave moved beyond the relatively straightforward, text-only chatbots that the companies initially released. Instead, Big AI is increasingly building and pushing toward the adoption of agents and âassistantsâ that promise they can take actions and complete tasks on your behalf. The problem? To get the most out of them, youâll need to grant them access to your systems and data. While much of the initial controversy over large language models (LLMs) was the flagrant copying of copyrighted data online, AI agentsâ access to your personal data will likely cause a new host of problems.
âAI agents, in order to have their full functionality, in order to be able to access applications, often need to access the operating system or the OS level of the device on which youâre running them,â says Harry Farmer, a senior researcher at the Ada Lovelace Institute, whose work has included studying the impact of AI assistants and found that they may cause âprofound threatâ to cybersecurity and privacy. For personalization of chatbots or assistants, Farmer says, there can be data trade-offs. âAll those things, in order to work, need quite a lot of information about you,â he says.
While thereâs no strict definition of what an AI agent actually is, theyâre often best thought of as a generative AI system or LLM that has been given some level of autonomy. At the moment, agents or assistants, including AI web browsers, can take control of your device and browse the web for you, booking flights, conducting research, or adding items to shopping carts. Some can complete tasks that include dozens of individual steps.
While current AI agents are glitchy and often canât complete the tasks theyâve been set out to do, tech companies are betting the systems will fundamentally change millions of peopleâs jobs as they become more capable. A key part of their utility likely comes from access to data. So, if you want a system that can provide you with your schedule and tasks, itâll need access to your calendar, messages, emails, and more.
Some more advanced AI products and features provide a glimpse into how much access agents and systems could be given. Certain agents being developed for businesses can read code, emails, databases, Slack messages, files stored in Google Drive, and more. Microsoftâs controversial Recall product takes screenshots of your desktop every few seconds, so that you can search everything youâve done on your device. Tinder has created an AI feature that can search through photos on your phone âto better understandâ usersâ âinterests and personality.â
Carissa VĂ©liz, an author and associate professor at the University of Oxford, says most of the time consumers have no real way to check if AI or tech companies are handling their data in the ways they claim to. âThese companies are very promiscuous with data,â VĂ©liz says. âThey have shown to not be very respectful of privacy.â
