Meta and the Unwilling Training Set: Workers Teaching Their Own Replacements

Consider the moment the engineer sees the dialogue box. It is late April 2026, in a Menlo Park office that has been emptier than it used to be, and she has just opened her work laptop after a four-day stretch on an overdue project. A grey panel informs her that a piece of software named the Model Capability Initiative is now installed on her device. It will capture mouse movements. It will log keystrokes. It will record clicks. It will take periodic snapshots of whatever she has on screen. It will run across hundreds of applications she uses without thinking, from her IDE to her Slack channels to her browser tabs on GitHub, Google, LinkedIn and Wikipedia. The data will train AI agents. There is no opt-out on a company device. She can sign the acknowledgement, or she can not. The reading time is ninety seconds.
What the panel does not say is that her professional judgement, the decisions she will make about how to frame a problem, which library to reach for, when to step away from a function that is not working, are now an input to a system whose stated purpose is to perform those decisions without her. The accumulated craft of her career is being read out of her keystrokes and into a model. There is no extra pay. There is no additional consent beyond the employment contract she signed when she joined. There is no realistic refusal that does not amount to a resignation, three weeks before the company begins the largest round of redundancies in its history.
This is the scene Reuters reported in an exclusive on 21 April 2026, in a story picked up by Fortune, TechCrunch, the BBC, CNBC, TechSpot, Fast Company and the Financial Times. It has since become a reference point in a debate the law has not yet caught up with. An employer is collecting data on workers without giving them a meaningful choice, and the lawyers consulted say the practice is probably legal. The story has a different shape, too. The data is no longer the by-product of work. The data is the work. What Meta is collecting is the cognitive substrate of professional judgement, harvested at scale, to train systems whose explicit purpose is to make the careers themselves redundant.
The question that follows is whether the employment contract as currently constructed is the right instrument for that exchange. If the expertise a worker has spent two decades cultivating can be extracted as a training corpus under the boilerplate provisions of a standard at-will agreement, what does employment mean? What does ownership mean? And what does consent mean when the practical alternative to consenting is to be unemployed?
What the Memo Said
The factual record is straightforward. In mid-April 2026, Meta circulated an internal communication on its Workplace platform announcing that the Model Capability Initiative would be installed on the work computers of its US-based employees. The tool would log mouse movements, clicks and keystrokes, take periodic on-screen snapshots, and run across hundreds of approved applications. The list, as reported by CNBC and TechSpot, included Google, LinkedIn, Wikipedia, GitHub, Slack, the Atlassian suite, and Meta's own properties including Threads and Manus. The data would be used solely for AI model training. Managers would not have access. There would be, the memo said, safeguards to protect sensitive content.
Reuters added two details that subsequent reporting has confirmed. European employees are entirely exempt. The General Data Protection Regulation requires explicit, freely given consent for the kind of monitoring MCI involves, and the working consensus among European employment lawyers is that consent obtained under threat of dismissal is not, in any meaningful sense, freely given. Rather than litigate the point, Meta drew a line at the Atlantic. The second detail is that there is no opt-out on a US-issued company device. When an engineering manager asked on the internal Workplace platform how to decline, Meta's chief technology officer Andrew Bosworth answered in writing that no opt-out existed. The choice presented to US staff was not a choice between participating and abstaining. It was a choice between participating and leaving.
Andy Stone, Meta's vice-president for communications, defended the programme in language quoted across the coverage. “If we're building agents to help people complete everyday tasks using computers, our models need real examples of how people actually use them,” Stone told reporters, citing “things like mouse movements, clicking buttons, and navigating dropdown menus.” The framing presents MCI as a research necessity. The agents Meta intends to build cannot be trained on synthetic data, the argument runs, because synthetic data does not capture how a competent professional actually navigates an interface under deadline pressure.
What Stone did not address is the obvious follow-on. If the goal of the agents is to perform tasks Meta employees currently perform, and if the way to train them is to record how those employees perform those tasks, then the employee is being asked to teach the system that will replace them, using the company's hardware, on the company's time, under the terms of the company's employment contract. The contract was not drafted with this exchange in mind. Whether it can carry the weight of it is the question the legal scholarship, and the workers themselves, are now turning to.
The American Statutory Floor
The first thing to note about the law that governs MCI is that, in the United States, there is not very much of it. Workplace electronic monitoring is governed federally by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, a statute drafted to address the wire-tapping of telephone calls. The ECPA prohibits the interception of electronic communications without consent. It carves out a broad business-use exception for monitoring on employer-owned equipment. The consent provision can be satisfied by an acknowledgement clause buried in an onboarding packet, signed once at the beginning of an employment relationship that may go on for a decade. The notion that an employee who signed such a clause in 2017 has thereby consented, in any morally substantive sense, to having their keystrokes mined for AI training in 2026 is one the statute, on a plain reading, accommodates.
There is no federal employee-monitoring statute that addresses behavioural data collected as training material for a generative model. The state-level patchwork is uneven. Connecticut, Delaware and New York require written notice before electronic monitoring is deployed. California's Consumer Privacy Act extends some employee-data rights but does not give workers a substantive veto on monitoring of company devices. Illinois's Biometric Information Privacy Act is narrow in scope and does not reach keystroke data. None of these regimes resembles the consent and proportionality framework the GDPR imposes on European employers.
The legal experts consulted by Fast Company described MCI as probably legal under current US employment law, while describing the consent frameworks the legality relies upon as substantively empty. Kayne McGladrey, a senior member of the IEEE, observed in coverage by TechTarget that the level of surveillance MCI implements “is something that can be done because we don't have a federal privacy act in the United States.” The position is consistent with that of Ifeoma Ajunwa, the Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Law at Emory Law School. Her 2023 book The Quantified Worker traces the doctrinal evolution of workplace monitoring from the Pinkerton agents of the late nineteenth century to the algorithmic management of the 2020s. American employment law, in her account, was built on assumptions about what an employer could reasonably know about a worker that recent technology has rendered obsolete. The statutes never contemplated continuous behavioural capture, because the technology to do it at scale did not exist. The result is a regime in which almost any form of monitoring on employer-owned equipment is permissible, because no rule was ever written to prohibit it.
Brishen Rogers, a professor at Georgetown Law and the author of the 2023 MIT Press book Data and Democracy at Work, makes a parallel argument. Labour law does more than fail to constrain data collection. It actively grants employers the right to gather workplace data and to develop new technologies on the basis of it, in a way that encourages firms to use those technologies as instruments of cost reduction. The legal silence is a structural choice. Data flowing out of the labour process is treated as the employer's property by default, with no corresponding obligation to share value, governance or access with the workers whose activity produced it.
In Europe, the same data would not be treated the same way. Article 6 of the GDPR requires a lawful basis for processing, and the European Data Protection Board's guidance, updated in 2023, holds that employee consent is generally not a valid basis in an employment context, because the power asymmetry renders consent insufficiently free. Continuous keystroke monitoring of the kind MCI implements would require a separate lawful basis, a proportionality assessment, a data-protection impact assessment, and meaningful worker consultation through the works councils that German, French, Dutch and Italian law variously mandate. The reason MCI does not run on European Meta machines is that European law would have required a different conversation, with a different set of actors, before it could lawfully have been implemented.
The Petition and the Posters
The American legal floor is low, but it is not infinitely low, and the response from inside Meta has been instructive. Within days of the memo's circulation, an internal petition opposing MCI had attracted more than 1,000 employee signatures, a figure reported by TechCrunch and Cybernews. Flyers appeared on walls of Meta's offices in Menlo Park and New York City reading “Don't want to work at the Employee Data Extraction Factory?” and directing colleagues to the petition. The flyers cited the National Labor Relations Act, the 1935 statute protecting workers' right to engage in concerted activity, whose protections extend to collective action against surveillance technologies affecting terms of employment. In the United Kingdom, a formal union organising drive began in early May 2026 among the company's London-based engineering and product staff.
What the petition does not contain is the harder claim made by labour scholars outside the company: that the data Meta is collecting is not Meta's to take. The employment contract governs what work the worker performs in exchange for what compensation. It does not, and on a defensible reading cannot, govern the transfer of the worker's cognitive patterns, the trace of their professional judgement, the substance of their accumulated craft, to a different category of asset. The keystrokes are not a by-product of the work like the lunch wrappers in the office bin. They are the work, in the sense that the work consists of choosing where to put attention, which sequence of inputs to make, and when to revise.
This is the argument Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson developed in their 2023 book Power and Progress and in Acemoglu's The Simple Macroeconomics of AI, a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper from May 2024. Their position is that the deployment of AI as a substitute for human labour, rather than as a complement to it, is a choice shaped by an institutional environment that systematically privileges employers' rights to extract value from workers' tacit knowledge over workers' rights to retain control over it. Acemoglu has called explicitly for legal frameworks that discourage “expertise theft” by establishing workers' ownership of their capabilities and creative output. The MCI rollout is the fully predictable consequence of a labour-law regime that has placed no such ownership claim in the worker's hands, in an industry with the technical capacity to extract whatever the law does not actively protect.
The Tacit and the Codified
There is a deeper conceptual problem with what MCI is trying to do, and the literature on it is older than the programme. Michael Polanyi's 1966 book The Tacit Dimension introduced the proposition that we know more than we can tell. The skills of an experienced professional are constituted by an enormous mass of implicit, embodied, contextual judgement that cannot be fully articulated even by the person who possesses it. Polanyi's claim, generalised by the MIT economist David Autor in his 2014 paper Polanyi's Paradox and the Shape of Employment Growth, was that this tacit knowledge constitutes a hard ceiling on automation, because computers can only be programmed to do what we can articulate.
The argument that has driven the past decade of AI development is that the ceiling can be lowered not by articulating the tacit knowledge but by capturing enough behavioural traces of it that a sufficiently large statistical model can recover the pattern without anyone having to write it down. This is the bet on which the large language model industry is built. It is the bet on which MCI is built. If you cannot extract a senior engineer's intuition by interviewing them, perhaps you can extract it by recording their keystrokes over a year. The bet is, on Polanyi's terms, a wager that the tacit dimension of professional knowledge can be reduced to a behavioural surface without remainder. There are good reasons to doubt it. There are also good commercial reasons to make it, because if it pays out, the resulting model can perform work currently performed by human professionals at a cost asymptotically close to zero.
Antonio Aloisi of IE University in Madrid and Valerio De Stefano of Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto have spent five years working on the legal implications of what they call algorithmic bosses. Their 2022 book Your Boss Is an Algorithm argues that AI in workplace decision-making does not simply automate tasks. It restructures the relations of authority and accountability that have historically constrained managerial discretion. An algorithmic manager is a different kind of authority, one whose decisions cannot be contested in the ways human decisions can be contested, because the reasoning is not legible to the worker and the responsibility is diffused across a chain of developers, deployers and vendors none of whom carries the full weight. MCI is one step removed from algorithmic management, because the model being trained is not, at the time of training, supervising the worker. But the substantive logic is the same. The data flows from the worker to a system that will perform the worker's job, with no flow back: no governance, no compensation, no audit right, no ability to inspect what the model has learned.
Veena Dubal, professor of law at the University of California, Irvine, has been making a related argument from the gig-economy side. Her 2023 Columbia Law Review article On Algorithmic Wage Discrimination documents how ride-hailing platforms use granular behavioural data to produce what she calls personalised pay, in which the wage varies in real time according to dozens of signals invisible to the worker. “Platform companies have been at the cutting edge,” she has said, “of trying to experiment with ways to control workers without it being obvious. When these experiments work, they leach into other industries and can affect people in formal employment.” MCI is a pure instance of the leach Dubal predicted: the mechanism by which platform companies turned gig workers into involuntary contributors to their own algorithmic management is now applied within the conventional employment relationship at a salaried tech firm. That Meta engineers earn six-figure salaries does not change the structural logic of the exchange.
A Brief History of Knowing Things About Workers
The story of employer attempts to capture worker knowledge is older than the computer industry by more than a century. Frederick Winslow Taylor's The Principles of Scientific Management, published in 1911 and drawing on work he had begun at Bethlehem Steel in the 1890s, is the canonical instance. Taylor's project was to extract from the heads of skilled workers the knowledge they used to do their jobs and to redistribute it to managers, who could then redesign the work in standardised forms that did not require the knowledge to be held by any individual worker. The point was to convert the workers' tacit competence into the firm's explicit property.
Taylor's method produced famous resistance, including the 1911 strikes at the Watertown Arsenal and the 1915 prohibition of stopwatch studies in federal workshops. The historian Harry Braverman, in his 1974 book Labor and Monopoly Capital, framed Taylorism as the systematic separation of conception from execution: the transfer of the planning of work, and the knowledge required to plan it, from the worker to the manager. The de-skilling of the labour process, on Braverman's account, was not an accidental side-effect but its central purpose, the mechanism by which capital secured itself against the bargaining power of skilled labour.
The MCI programme is, in important respects, a Taylorist project at a higher level of abstraction. It is not trying to extract the manual motions of a steel worker. It is trying to extract the cognitive motions of a knowledge worker. The instrument is no longer a stopwatch but a behavioural-capture pipeline feeding a large neural network. The intellectual purpose is the same: to convert what is held tacitly inside the heads of workers, who can quit and take it with them, into an asset held explicitly by the firm. Taylor's workers struck against the stopwatch, and the strike was about money but also about something more fundamental. They understood that what was being extracted was not just their time but their craft, and that the firm intended to use the extraction to render the craft itself obsolete. The flyers in the Menlo Park hallways in May 2026 are saying, in updated language, something Taylor's workers said in 1911.
The mid-twentieth-century history of knowledge work was in significant part a history of negotiated arrangements between firms and workers whose value could not be extracted by Taylorist means. The bargain, imperfectly and unevenly, was that the knowledge worker retained ownership of their professional identity, their portable skill, the relationships they built, in exchange for the firm getting the output of their labour and the right to direct it. The recognition that the knowledge worker's expertise was something the firm could rent rather than own was the structural backbone of the post-war professional economy. What MCI proposes is the rescission of that bargain. The keystrokes are not the output of their labour in the conventional sense. They are the trace of how they think while they work. To claim those traces as a corporate asset is to assert ownership over precisely the thing the post-war bargain had reserved to the worker.
The Macroeconomic Question
The gains from AI automation, Acemoglu argues, accrue principally to the owners of the AI systems, and the costs accrue principally to the workers whose tasks the systems displace. If the workers whose tasks are being displaced are also the workers whose behavioural data trained the systems, the asymmetry compounds. The workers contribute the input, do not share in the output, and are the bearers of the displacement risk the output creates.
Aiha Nguyen, who leads the Labor Futures programme at the Data and Society Research Institute, framed the wider pattern in her 2021 report The Constant Boss: Work Under Digital Surveillance. The datafication of work produces a sequence of effects in which speedups, employment insecurity, the shifting of risk from employers to workers, and the exacerbation of racial profiling all accompany the technological roll-out. MCI brings the same pattern into the white-collar economy. The Meta engineer in Menlo Park is, in structural terms, in the same position as the warehouse picker whose every movement is logged: producing data the firm will use to reorganise or eliminate the work she is doing now.
The point is not that MCI is uniquely bad. The point is that MCI is uniquely visible. The same logic operates, in less explicit form, across the technology industry. Microsoft's Recall feature, the AI-coding assistants from GitHub Copilot to Cognition's Devin, the productivity-analytics tools sold by Microsoft Viva, Workday and Veriato: each is, in some measure, a system that captures fine-grained behavioural data from knowledge workers and uses it to train or refine models. Most are presented as productivity enhancements rather than training pipelines. MCI's contribution is that it stripped away the click-through fiction. Bosworth told the engineers there was no opt-out, and the consequence was a petition. According to 2025 studies reported by The Register and Computerworld, between 74 and 80 per cent of US employers now use some form of online tracking on remote or hybrid staff. The employee-monitoring software market is projected to reach $7.61 billion by 2029. Nearly half of monitored workers said in 2025 they would consider leaving if surveillance increased; 45 per cent reported monitoring had harmed their mental health.
What Consent Would Have to Look Like
The legal experts who told Fast Company that MCI was probably legal were not endorsing the programme. They were diagnosing the gap between what the law permits and what the moment requires. A consent regime that meets the substantive standard implied by the European tradition would have to look quite different from the regime that currently obtains.
The first requirement is informational. The employee must be told, in language they can understand, what data will be collected, for what purpose, for how long, how it will be used in training, what models will be trained on it, and whether the resulting models will be sold or deployed in ways that affect the employee's own employment prospects. A notification box that runs for ninety seconds before the worker has to start their day does not approach this.
The second requirement is structural. The consent must be obtained in conditions that allow it to be refused without consequence. A consent obtained from an employee who can be dismissed at will for any non-protected reason is not, on any reasonable reading, freely given. Meta did not extend the programme to the EU not because EU keystrokes are technically distinguishable from US keystrokes, but because the EU's structural consent regime would not accept the at-will American template.
The third requirement is governance. The data has to be subject to oversight regimes that include the workers whose behaviour generated it. Trade-union consultation, works-council representation, designated worker-data trustees: each has been proposed in the relevant literature and each has analogues elsewhere in the OECD. The current US regime offers none. The data Meta collects flows to Meta's Superintelligence Labs, led by Alexandr Wang, the former Scale AI chief executive who joined as part of Meta's $14.3 billion investment in Scale in 2024. The workers whose data it is have no representation in Wang's governance, no access to the models, no audit right, no portability claim.
The fourth requirement is compensation. The value of the data Meta is collecting is, by the company's own logic, substantial. If it were not, the company would not have rolled out MCI in the face of a thousand-signature petition, a union drive, internal posters and the worst week of press its AI division has had since the Cambridge Analytica era. Mark Zuckerberg has committed up to $135 billion in capital expenditure for 2026, the bulk on AI infrastructure, and the agents MCI data is intended to train are central to that spend. A worker whose keystrokes are an input to a $135 billion bet has, in any account of value that takes labour seriously, a claim on a portion of the upside. The standard employment contract does not acknowledge the claim exists.
The Difficulty That Will Not Resolve
There is a temptation, in writing about cases like MCI, to end with a list of policy prescriptions and a confident assertion that the prescriptions, if adopted, would resolve the difficulty. The temptation should be resisted. The difficulty is real, and not all of it is resolvable by legislation.
Part of the difficulty is that there are versions of MCI that are clearly fine and versions that are clearly not, and the legal vocabulary needed to distinguish them has not been developed. If Meta were collecting code review discussions to fine-tune a model that helped its own engineers spot bugs faster, with no plan to deploy elsewhere and no plan to eliminate engineering roles, the case would look different. If a hospital were capturing the conversations of senior consultants with junior doctors to train an AI assistant that helped juniors learn from seniors' reasoning, the case would look different again. The features that make MCI feel like an extraction, the asymmetry of value flow, the absence of meaningful refusal, the displacement risk for the workers whose data is being used, are not present in every instance of workplace AI training.
Part of the difficulty is that the workers themselves do not have a simple position. The Meta engineers signing the petition are not, in most cases, anti-AI. They work in an organisation whose strategic direction is AI development and whose stock options pay for their mortgages. Many have personally built features of the models being trained. Their objection is not that AI training data should not exist. It is that they did not consent, in any substantive sense, to being the source of it, and that the institution refused to give them a meaningful way to decline. The objection is, in the proper sense of the word, procedural. A regime that addressed it would still leave the underlying question, about whether AI training on worker behavioural data is a legitimate corporate activity at all, unresolved.
Part of the difficulty, finally, is that the underlying question is genuinely hard. The case for treating worker expertise as inalienable is the case for a stronger property regime in human capital than any developed economy currently maintains. The case for treating it as fully alienable, already sold by signing the employment contract, is the case for a regime that treats human cognition as factor input on the same terms as raw material. Both positions are coherent. Both have intellectual defenders. The settlement between them, in any actually existing economy, is some negotiated middle position that depends on the relative bargaining power of the workers and the firms, on the cultural understandings the parties bring to the negotiation, and on the legal and political environment in which the negotiation takes place.
The MCI memo was a moment in which that settlement was renegotiated unilaterally, in the firm's favour, in a jurisdiction whose legal regime had no mechanism for the workers to push back through institutional channels. The petition, the posters, the union drive and the press coverage are the workers pushing back through the channels that were available, which are not the channels through which durable renegotiation usually takes place. What is visible is that the old settlement, the post-war professional bargain in which the knowledge worker rented their output to the firm while retaining their expertise as their own, is no longer the operative assumption inside at least one of the largest technology companies in the world. What assumption will replace it, and at whose initiative, is the question the next decade of labour law and labour economics is going to have to answer. The engineer who clicked through the acknowledgement on her work laptop in April was not the first person to be asked it, and she will not be the last. What she was the first to do, along with the thousand colleagues who signed the petition behind her, is to make it impossible to pretend the question had not been asked.
References
- Reuters. “Exclusive: Meta to start capturing employee mouse movements, keystrokes for AI training data.” 21 April 2026. https://tech.yahoo.com/ai/meta-ai/articles/exclusive-meta-start-capturing-employee-162745587.html
- Jessica Mathews. “Meta will start tracking employees' screens and keystrokes to train AI tools.” Fortune. 21 April 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/04/21/meta-will-start-tracking-employees-screens-and-keystrokes-to-train-ai/
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- Aiha Nguyen. The Constant Boss: Work Under Digital Surveillance. Data and Society. May 2021. https://datasociety.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/The_Constant_Boss.pdf
- Michael Polanyi. The Tacit Dimension. University of Chicago Press. 1966.
- David H. Autor. “Polanyi's Paradox and the Shape of Employment Growth.” NBER Working Paper 20485. September 2014. https://www.nber.org/papers/w20485
- Frederick Winslow Taylor. The Principles of Scientific Management. Harper and Brothers. 1911.
- Harry Braverman. Labor and Monopoly Capital. Monthly Review Press. 1974.
- Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, Public Law 99-508. 18 USC 2510-2523. https://bja.ojp.gov/program/it/privacy-civil-liberties/authorities/statutes/1285
- European Data Protection Board. “Guidelines on data processing at work.” Updated 2023.
- The Register. “Bossware rises as employers keep closer tabs on remote staff.” 23 November 2025. https://www.theregister.com/2025/11/23/bossware_monitor_remote_employees/
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Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
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