
"Meta has rolled out an opt-in AI feature to its US and Canadian Facebook users that claims to make their photos and videos more "shareworthy." The only catch is that the feature is designed for your phone's camera roll - not the media you've already uploaded to Facebook. If you opt in, Meta's AI will comb through your camera roll, upload your unpublished photos to Meta's cloud, and surface "hidden gems" that are "lost among screenshots, receipts, and random snaps," the company says."
"If Facebook wanting to look at your unpublished photos sounds familiar, it might be because we wrote about an early test in June. At that time, the company claimed unposted, private photos were not being used to train Meta's AI, but it declined to rule out whether it would do so in the future. Well, the future is now, and it sure sounds like Meta wants to train its AI on your photos - under certain conditions."
Meta rolled out an opt-in AI feature for US and Canadian Facebook users that analyzes phone camera rolls to make photos and videos more shareworthy. The feature uploads unpublished camera-roll photos to Meta's cloud and surfaces hidden gems lost among screenshots, receipts, and random snaps. Users can save or share suggested edits and collages; Meta states it does not use camera-roll media to improve AI unless users edit with Meta's AI tools or publish suggestions to Facebook. An earlier June test claimed unposted private photos were not used to train Meta's AI, though the company did not rule out future use.
Read at The Verge
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