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Samsung is holding your health data hostage to train its AI

Samsung Health now requires users to consent to AI training on their health data or lose access to it, raising serious privacy concerns.

Samsung is holding your health data hostage to train its AI
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Tech and Science Editor
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TL;DR: Samsung Health now forces users to consent to their health data being used for AI training and modeling-or else syncing is blocked and stored data is deleted unless legally required. The toggle limits access for users who decline, raising privacy concerns about sensitive medical and menstrual information and signaling a troubling shift in health-data treatment.
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Samsung is forcing users to consent to AI training in the Samsung Health app or face losing access to their health data.

Samsung is holding your health data hostage to train its AI 2

The controversial new toggle, now appearing in the app, requires users to allow their health information to be used for AI modeling or risk having it deleted. The notice, titled "Consent to the Use of Health Data for AI Training and Modeling," appears upon opening the app. Disabling it prevents users from syncing health data to their Samsung accounts, and the data is removed unless required by law. How-To Geek reported the first sightings of the toggle, which has since spread to more users.

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This move raises serious privacy concerns, especially since the data in question may include highly sensitive information, such as medical records, medications, and menstrual cycle data. The broader AI industry is increasingly reliant on personal data, but requiring users to give up privacy or lose core functionality is a troubling trend. Samsung's decision may signal a shift in how health data is treated in the AI era.

"The health data you have allowed us to collect and process will be used for AI training and modeling, including human review, to improve Samsung Health, including algorithms to analyze health conditions and our AI features," reads the Samsung Health page

With no clear opt-out path, users are left with a stark choice: give up their privacy for AI training or lose access to the data they've tracked. If this becomes standard practice, expect more scrutiny and pushback from privacy advocates and general users who don't wish to contribute to the seemingly endless hunger of AI companies wanting to feed their expansive models, which are then sold right back to the same consumers that are being harvested.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Question #1

Will disabling the AI training toggle permanently delete my existing Samsung Health data or is there a grace period?

Question #2

Does the AI training consent apply to all data types (medical records, medications, menstrual cycle) or only certain categories?

Question #3

Is the AI training toggle applied per device or per Samsung account across multiple devices?

Question #4

Can Samsung Health syncing be limited to local device storage to avoid sending data to Samsung for AI training?

Have a question not listed here? Ask below and TweakBot will answer it.

The main problem with this feature is: what do Samsung Health users who don't use any generative AI features do, but just want access to the standard Samsung Health? By not opting into data tracking, those users have now had their access revoked.

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Tech and Science Editor

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Jak joined TweakTown in 2017 and has since reviewed 100s of new tech products and kept us informed daily on the latest science, space, and artificial intelligence news. Jak's love for science, space, and technology, and, more specifically, PC gaming, began at 10 years old. It was the day his dad showed him how to play Age of Empires on an old Compaq PC. Ever since that day, Jak fell in love with games and the progression of the technology industry in all its forms.

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