If youâve been on the Facebook app lately, you mightâve seen Metaâs AI inject itself into the comment section with summaries of what people say. Given how wild Facebook comment sections often become, itâs not hard to imagine how ridiculous some of these summaries turn out. (This isnât the first time Metaâs AI has appeared in the comment section, by the way: 404 Media spotted it pretending to be a parent in a Facebook group.)
Technology
Meta’s AI is summarizing some bizarre Facebook comment sections
Meta is using its AI tool to summarize the comment sections on Facebook. These summaries reflect what people are saying, whether good or bad.
After seeing screenshots of the feature shared on Threads and Reddit, I decided to check the comment sections on my Facebook app. I found the AI summaries popping up on many of the posts I checked â unhinged responses and all. One AI summary on a post about a store closure said, âSome commenters attribute the closure to the store âgoing wokeâ or having poor selection, while others point to the rise of online shopping.â
Another Facebook post from Vice about Mexican street wrestlers prompted a comment section summary that said some people were âless impressedâ with the performance and referred to it as a âmoronic way of panhandling.â The AI also picked up some of the more lighthearted jokes people made about a bobcat sighting in a Florida town. âSome admired the sighting, with one commenter hoping the bobcat remembered sunscreen.â
Itâs still not clear how Meta chooses which posts to display comment summaries on, and the company didnât immediately respond to The Vergeâs request for comment.
Either way, the summaries really donât include anything that I found useful (unless you love vague notions about what random people have to say) â but it could help you identify posts where the comment section has gotten too toxic to bother scrolling.
The AI summaries have also prompted privacy concerns, as Meta is feeding user comments into its AI system to generate them. Over the past week or so, many Facebook and Instagram users in the European Union and the UK received a notification informing them that Meta will train its AI on their content. (Data protection laws in both regions require Meta to disclose this information.) Although Meta will let these users object to having their data used to train AI, the process isnât that simple, and the company has rejected some usersâ requests.
Here in the US, Metaâs privacy policy page says the company uses âinformation shared on Metaâs Products and servicesâ to train AI, including posts, photos, and captions. Meta lets you submit a request to correct or delete personal information used to train its AI models, but it only applies to information from a third party. Everything else seems to be fair game.