Meta's New AI Image Feature Sparks Consent and Privacy Concerns
L'essentiel
- Meta launched "Muse Image," an AI tool allowing users to create images from public Instagram photos.
- Concerns about consent, misuse, and privacy are high, especially given Meta's past privacy issues and public skepticism towards AI.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Meta launched "Muse Image," an AI feature allowing users to create images using public Instagram photos, which has raised significant privacy and consent issues.
On Tuesday, Meta launched “Muse Image,” a new AI image-generation feature that allows users to create original images, edit existing photos, and even generate custom ads directly within its apps.
But one capability has quickly become the center of controversy.
Muse Image allows users to generate AI images using photos from public Instagram accounts. As long as a person’s profile is public, another user can tag that account and use their images as part of an AI-generated creation. (Only private accounts and accounts belonging to users under 18 are automatically excluded from the feature.)
One huge concern is consent. Users may have no idea that their public photos can be incorporated into AI-generated images by strangers, and they aren’t even notified when someone reuses their public content. Plus, making it easy to manipulate people’s images opens the door to misuse, harassment, impersonation, and nonconsensual image editing.
If you’re looking to opt out of this, here’s how you can do it.
How to opt out of Meta’s Muse Image generator
Head to your profile and click the three horizontal lines in the top-right corner.
Scroll down to “Sharing and reuse.”
Look for the option that says, “Allow people to use your content on Instagram with AI features on Meta”
Toggle the setting off for both posts and reels.
Muse Image arrives at a time when AI tools are being increasingly integrated into social media platforms. As tech companies race to roll out new generative AI features, many experts argue that stronger privacy protections and greater transparency are needed, so users fully understand how their photos and personal data are being used.
Public skepticism around AI is already high. According to a Pew Research Center survey, 35% of respondents said they’re more concerned than excited about the growing use of artificial intelligence.
Additionally, Meta’s track record on user privacy has also fueled skepticism surrounding its latest AI feature.
Questions ouvertes
- Will Meta implement stricter controls on AI image generation?
- How will Meta address potential misuse and harassment?
- What is the long-term impact on user privacy?





