Current:Home > InvestMeta will start labeling AI-generated images on Instagram and Facebook -CapitalWay
Meta will start labeling AI-generated images on Instagram and Facebook
View
Date:2025-04-12 04:47:12
When an AI-generated image of the pope in a puffy white coat went viral last year, internet users debated whether the pontiff was really that stylish. Fake images of former President Donald Trump being arrested caused similar confusion, even though the person who generated the images said they were made with artificial intelligence.
Soon, similar images posted on Instagram, Facebook or Threads may carry a label disclosing they were the product of sophisticated AI tools, which can generate highly plausible images, videos, audio and text from simple prompts.
Meta, which owns all three platforms, said on Tuesday that it will start labeling images created with leading artificial intelligence tools in the coming months. The move comes as tech companies — both those that build AI software and those that host its outputs — are coming under growing pressure to address the potential for the cutting-edge technology to mislead people.
Those concerns are particularly acute as millions of people vote in high-profile elections around the world this year. Experts and regulators have warned that deepfakes — digitally manipulated media — could be used to exacerbate efforts to mislead, discourage and manipulate voters.
Meta and others in the industry have been working to develop invisible markers, including watermarks and metadata, indicating that a piece of content has been created by AI. Meta said it will begin using those markers to apply labels in multiple languages on its apps, so users of its platforms will know whether what they're seeing is real or fake.
"As the difference between human and synthetic content gets blurred, people want to know where the boundary lies," Nick Clegg, Meta's president of global affairs, wrote in a company blog post. "People are often coming across AI-generated content for the first time and our users have told us they appreciate transparency around this new technology. So it's important that we help people know when photorealistic content they're seeing has been created using AI."
The labels will apply to images from Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, Adobe, Midjourney and Shutterstock — but only once those companies start including watermarks and other technical metadata in images created by their software. Images created with Meta's own AI tools are already labeled "Imagined with AI."
That still leaves gaps. Other image generators, including open-source models, may never incorporate these kinds of markers. Meta said it's working on tools to automatically detect AI content, even if that content doesn't have watermarks or metadata.
What's more, Meta's labels apply to only static photos. The company said it can't yet label AI-generated audio or video this way because the industry has not started including that data in audio and video tools.
For now, Meta is relying on users to fill the void. On Tuesday, the company said that it will start requiring users to disclose when they post "a photorealistic video or realistic-sounding audio that was digitally created or altered" and that it may penalize accounts that fail to do so.
"If we determine that digitally created or altered image, video or audio content creates a particularly high risk of materially deceiving the public on a matter of importance, we may add a more prominent label if appropriate, so people have more information and context," Clegg said.
That expands on Meta's requirement, introduced in November, that political ads include a disclosure if they digitally generated or altered images, video or audio.
TikTok and YouTube also require users to disclose when they post realistic AI-generated content. Last fall, TikTok said it would start testing automatically applying labels to content that it detects was created or edited with AI.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Georgia mom charged with murder after 6-year-old son found stabbed after apartment fire
- Savannah Chrisley Pens Message to Late Ex Nic Kerdiles One Month After His Death
- Why Derick Dillard Threatened Jill Duggar's Dad Jim Bob With Protective Order
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Facing dementia without a diagnosis is crushing. A new program in Kenya offers help
- Dwayne Johnson's Wax Figure Gets an Update After Museum's Honest Mistake
- Amazon's Holiday Beauty Haul Is Here: Save on COSRX, CHI & More
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Rents are falling in major cities. Here are 24 metro areas where tenants are paying less this year.
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Far-right candidate loses Tennessee mayoral election as incumbent decries hate and divisiveness
- City of Orlando buys Pulse nightclub property to build memorial to massacre victims
- Born after Superstorm Sandy’s destruction, 2 big flood control projects get underway in New Jersey
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Man trapped in jewelry vault overnight is freed when timer opens the chamber as scheduled
- Hong Kong cuts taxes for foreign home buyers and stock traders as it seeks to maintain global status
- 5 Things podcast: Blinken urges 'humanitarian pauses' but US won't back ceasefire in Gaza
Recommendation
Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
Candidates spar over key tax issue in final gubernatorial debate before Kentucky election
Bellingham scores again to lead Real Madrid to 2-1 win over Braga in Champions League
Live updates | Israel’s bombardment in Gaza surges, reducing buildings to rubble
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
12-year-old student behind spate of fake school bomb threats in Maryland, police say
Bobi, the world's oldest dog, dies at 31
Week 8 fantasy football rankings: Lamar Jackson leads Ravens' resurgence