Facebook introduced an opt-in feature allowing the platform to scan users’ camera rolls to recommend photos for sharing, despite likely privacy concerns about granting Meta access to device images.
The new tool, which rolled out to users in the United Kingdom this week, enables Meta’s system to scan camera rolls on devices and recommend collections such as travel collages and recaps that users can post to the main feed or Stories. The feature requires explicit opt-in consent before activation.
“Many people capture life’s moments but rarely share them—whether because they don’t think their photos or videos are shareworthy, or because they simply don’t have time to create something special,” Meta explained in a statement. “With your permission, this opt-in feature analyzes media in your camera roll to find standout moments—the memories that can get lost among screenshots, receipts and random snapshots.”
The tool will recommend creative edits and generate videos from camera roll content to help users create shareable posts. Recommendations may appear in Stories, Feed, and Memories for users to review privately before deciding what to share. Users can manage or disable the feature at any time in Facebook camera roll settings.
Meta’s notes on the feature explain the technical process:
To suggest ideas for you, we’ll analyze media in your camera roll and upload select media to our cloud on an ongoing basis, based on metadata like date, location, themes, objects and the presence of people.
Facebook experimented with similar functionality in the United States last year, providing recommendations on content to share in-stream. However, Meta has a questionable history with image scanning, particularly regarding facial identification technology.
In 2021, Meta shut down its facial recognition process on Facebook after recommended tags for photos continually caused concerns among users and privacy advocates. The company has recently waded back into facial scanning for identity verification purposes and for its artificial intelligence glasses to facilitate connections.
The camera roll scanning feature represents another method to potentially incorporate face recognition capabilities, raising questions about whether users will accept granting Meta access to all images stored on their devices.
Meta is seeking more ways to keep users sharing updates to its apps in order to maintain audience engagement and feed more information into training its AI systems. Social media companies benefit from AI development through direct access to constantly updating streams of human-generated data, which can train systems on language trends and interests.
Both Meta and X have advantages over OpenAI because their data streams are always growing and evolving. However, both platforms have seen declines in posting activity in recent years as fewer people look to share publicly.
Research published by The Wall Street Journal in 2023 showed that 61% of U.S. adults have become more selective about what they post, with main reasons being criticism, privacy concerns, and “a general feeling that social media isn’t as fun as it used to be.”
Additional issues including misinformation, toxicity, ad saturation, and a push toward entertainment-focused short-form video clips have contributed to social media feeling less personal and less social than in previous years. Facebook has been exploring multiple ways to encourage sharing in response to these trends.
The feature launch comes as advocacy groups recently warned Meta against adding facial recognition capabilities to its AI glasses, citing privacy concerns. The company faces ongoing scrutiny over how it handles user data and implements surveillance technologies across its platforms.
Whether users will embrace automatically scanning camera rolls remains uncertain, particularly given widespread concerns about digital privacy and Meta’s previous controversies surrounding data collection and facial recognition technology.
