159 comments

  • coef2 6 hours ago

    I miss the old days when Facebook was simply a fun way to reconnect with friend and family who lived far away. Unfortunately, those days are gone. It feels like an over engineered attention-hogging system that collects a large amount of data and risks people's mental health along the way.

    • msgodel 6 hours ago

      From the very beginning Facebook has been an AI wearing your friends as a skinsuit. People are only just starting to notice now.

      • d_watt 6 hours ago

        Perhaps naive to say, but I think there was the briefest moment where your status updates started with "is", feeds were chronological, and photos and links weren't pushed over text, that it was not an adversarial actor to one's wellbeing.

        • smeej 4 hours ago

          There was an even briefer moment where there was no such thing as status updates. You didn't have a "wall." The point wasn't to post about your own life. You could go leave public messages on other people's profiles. And you could poke them. And that was about it.

          I remember complaining like hell when the wall came out, that it was the beginning of the end. But this was before publicly recording your own thoughts somewhere everyone could see was commonplace, so I did it by messaging my friends on AIM.

          And then when the Feed came out? It was received as creepy and stalkerish. And there are now (young) adults born in the time since who can't even fathom a world without ubiquitous feeds in your pocket.

          Call me nostalgic, but we were saner then.

          • figassis 2 hours ago

            Oh wow, I’d even forgotten about pokes. Thanks for that trip down memory lane.

        • prisenco 5 hours ago

          The early, organic days of social networking are always fun. They never would have pulled in billions of users if they started off how they are now.

        • distances 19 minutes ago

          Very true! I was annoyed by the loss of the "is" pattern and basically stopped using Facebook when the chronological feed was removed.

        • cornfieldlabs 4 hours ago

          Couldn't have said it better.

          Nothing is a social network anymore.

          Everything is a content-consumer a platform now.

          People just want to scroll and scroll

        • safety1st an hour ago

          I mean let's be clear on the history and not romanticize anything, Zuck created Facebook pretty much so he could spy on college girls. He denies this of course, but it all started with his Facemash site for ranking the girls, and then we get to the early Facebook era and there's his quote about the "4,000 dumbfucks trusting him with their photos" etc.

          There is no benevolent original version of FB. It was a toy made by a college nerd who wanted to siphon data about chicks. It was more user friendly back then because he didn't have a monopoly yet. Now it has expanded to siphoning data from the entire human race and because they're powerful they can be bigger bullies about it. Zuck has kind of indirectly apologized for being a creeper during his college years. But the behavior of his company hasn't changed.

        • mysterydip 5 hours ago

          Well they had to grow the userbase before they could abuse it :)

        • lern_too_spel 3 hours ago

          They were stealing your contacts from wherever they could get them. There was never a time when they didn't abuse their users.

      • 30 minutes ago
        [deleted]
      • labster 5 hours ago

        Nah, not from the very beginning. Before the News Feed, The Facebook was great to find people and keep in contact. Following someone’s page too often was called Facebook stalking and was socially discouraged.

        Unfortunately parasocial behavior is good for engagement.

    • cornfieldlabs 4 hours ago

      I am building one with a chronological feed and no public profiles.

      You need to already know someone to find them here.

      Check out the waitlist!

      https://waitlist-tx.pages.dev/

      Edit:

      Here are some rough layout designs https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1uLwnXDdUsC9hMZBa1ysR...

      It's intentionally simple

      • 1vuio0pswjnm7 3 hours ago

        In addition to exporting one's contacts from Facebook in order to import them into an alternative, there should be a way to use whatever is provided through Facebook's "Download your data" to populate new accounts in the new alternative.

        Perhaps it already exists but I have thought about writing something that takes what is provided by "Download your data" and produces a local SQLite database, a local webpage, local website or some combination thereof that is served from the user's computer instead of Meta servers.

        However I do not use Facebook enough to justify the effort, and when I do I never look at the "feed".

        • cornfieldlabs 3 hours ago

          We don't let anyone find you on the site without your short secret code which they need to ask you for. The code can be changed anytime. You (the user) need to actively ask your friends' code to build up the network. This also keeps the network small since you won't go out of your way to ask someone their code unless you really know them.

          A really private place with only people that matter.

      • motoxpro 2 hours ago

        What is the difference between this and a group chat? Most people have < 20 people that they know well enough to give a secret code to unless you're a creator or personality, in which care we are back to snapchat.

        If the posts are more long form, what is the difference between this and a blog where the "secret code" is the URL?

        Or even a finsta account currated the way you want.

        I don't say these as a "it's not gonna work" as in consumer its about the experience, I genuinely wonder why the experience will be better

        • cornfieldlabs 2 hours ago

          These are very valid questions , thanks for asking them.

          > Group chat Group chats work when everyone in one know each other. I have N different circles which don't overlap so group doesn't chat makes sense. Messages in group chat are more "in the face" - everyone has to. I just wanted a place where I can dump my thoughts without feeling like seeking immediate attention.

          > Blog PostX is indeed something like a private blogging space. It's something I wanted for myself.

          Honestly I am not fully sure how it's going to be used by people but I have built something me and my friends like and use.

      • pulkitanand 4 hours ago

        Your landing page talks about all the right goals. postx is a good placeholder name, I recommend ideating a better name for launch. looking forward, wish you the best.

        • cornfieldlabs 4 hours ago

          new users will face the empty feed problem since by design one can't find anyone without their code.

          No "People you may know" or "select at least N interests or follow N accounts to continue".

          I think early adopters will invite their friends to join and that is the only way.

          Got any suggestions?

          • vishalontheline 3 hours ago

            Show 3 walls side by side: updates by friends, interactions by direct connections on shares by friends of friends, and public stories by those nearby (geographically). The latter could also turn into a way for local businesses to promote themselves. Keep the 3 in separate lanes in order to let the user decide how much they want to doom scroll.

            • cornfieldlabs 3 hours ago

              Thanks for the thoughts.

              But we are not interested turning into Facebook. You will only see posts of your friends and nothing more.

              I was spending 8+ hours a day doom scrolling which led to this idea. I just want to see what my friends want me to see and that's it.

              • vishalontheline 2 hours ago

                Sure thing. Oh - maybe let people follow non-friends that they want to see public updates from, and make everyone follow you, so their walls won't be so empty on Day 1 ;).

                • cornfieldlabs an hour ago

                  Thanks :)

                  Few others have suggested the same. But it kind of defeats the purpose since the goal is to see updates from your close friends and have only private profils. Even though empty feed is not good, it's a feature in our platform. We want to see what users do when the feed is empty. Only real way to have a non empty feed without compromising the core idea is letting users invite friends.

                  I am thinking along those lines!

        • cornfieldlabs 4 hours ago

          Thank you Anand - for the encouragement and joining the waitlist!

          It means really a lot to us.

          We are working on a better name and the site!

          I'll send you the welcome email manually soon!

    • DSingularity 3 hours ago

      Risks people’s mental health? I would say it is pretty obvious that FB and IG are bad for people. Some may have a natural mental fortitude and can survive it without instruction but for the rest of us we need some instructions on how to use these platforms without compromising key aspects of our mental health.

      • absurdo 3 hours ago

        I’d like to see a proper study on this that can be replicated before I jump on this train. And I’m a supporter of Jonathan “the kids are not alright” Haidt but let’s not kid ourselves his work is questionable throughout.

        It’s easy to dogpile. I’d like to see more proof, that’s all. “It’s obvious” doesn’t cut it for me. For one, we have major societal problems that are being exposed through these platforms, and the mere knowledge of the problem has a negative impact on the individual. Do we shut the platform down because it’s showing us things we don’t want to see, or do we fix the societal problem? And many others.

        • Llamamoe an hour ago

          Pop some terms into Google scholar and you'll find study after study after study both correlating social media use with worse mental health and demonstrating improvements from reducing use, in children and adults both.

          It varies by demographic, but yeah, social media are pretty universally awful for humans, and that's not just conjecture.

    • suzzer99 2 hours ago

      I have Fluff-Busting Purity, I'm part of a bunch of Facebook groups, and I only browse on my laptop. I pretty much only see what I want to.

    • neepi 2 hours ago

      Read Careless People. It was never about that.

    • figassis 2 hours ago

      Would a friends and staying in touch social network even succeed today?

      • cornfieldlabs an hour ago

        I am trying to find out with the one I am building :)

        I wonder how many people can give up effortless doomscrolling to see a limited length chronological feed made up of their friends' posts

    • wkat4242 2 hours ago

      Yeah the one difference with some other enshittified things is that I really have the impression that Facebook was always meant to go this way.

      It was also one of the first to drop genuine user-sercing features like the old timeline (just all the posts of people you followed which you came there to see) which it replaced with the algorithmic feed which recommended stuff you never asked for or wanted.

      Instagram did keep that feature though until 2 years and still has it although it's constantly switching it off.

    • xyst 4 hours ago

      These days I treat Facebook as a marketplace for offloading lightly used items.

      Social media is dead to me.

      • danielbln 5 minutes ago

        > Social media is dead to me

        You know, HN is social media.

      • cornfieldlabs 4 hours ago

        Facebook marketplace has surprisingly large number of listings and in my country not even dedicated marketplaces can come close

        • mrweasel 2 hours ago

          Facebook marketplace killed or vastly reduced the size of other marketplace platforms in many countries. Strangely it also seems like the amount of fraud rose as people moved to Facebook Marketplace. I guess it was easier for scammers to work on Facebook, needing only one platform to commit fraud in multiple countries, rather than attempting to work on hundreds of local sites.

      • idiotsecant 4 hours ago

        What a coincidence, I use it as a market for buying lightly used items.

    • npalli 5 hours ago

      So Feb 4, 2004 (founding) to September 6, 2006 (newsfeed). LOL.

    • droopyEyelids 6 hours ago

      This is a real Rip Van Winkle style take (posted with gentle humor)

  • ants_everywhere 7 hours ago

    This is why I requested family not to post pictures of my children on Facebook.

    They will get to decide what to do with their likenesses when they're older. It seemed cruel to let Facebook train a model on them from the time they were babies until they first start using social media in earnest.

    • mitthrowaway2 5 hours ago

      Some cultures long avoided being photographed, because they believed the camera would steal their soul.

      It took the rest of us much longer to realize they were right.

      • wkat4242 2 hours ago

        I like this poetic way of putting it, though I don't agree with the message.

        In Holland we have a saying, what do you bring it your house is burning down? And most people said my photos. This was before the digital age and cloud obviously. We take photos because we care. Stuffing them into everyone else's face has also been a thing at birthday parties but outside that not so much.

        • strogonoff an hour ago

          Photography stealing someone’s soul is easy to discount as an obvious misconception, but if you think of “soul” as a shortcut metaphor for some difficult to describe sociopsychological phenomena then there is some food for thought in it.

          First, for most of us in daily life, once you know you are being photographed you exit any context you were in and enter the new “I am being photographed” context. In some important way, you are stolen from the world around you for a period of time. Your body is still present, but you might be thinking about how this all would look at any later time. This does not apply when photography is specifically arranged by you (common in analog era), or if you are unaware of being a subject photographed (but there may be other concerns about that[0]).

          Second, a photo/likeness of you is a proxy allowing other people to relate to you. Keeping in mind that we only ever relate to images/models that we build of each other in our minds (we have no “direct access” to other people), in this case a photo is a shallow (there is little other information than appearance) but weirdly high fidelity (for sighted people) model of you. This is not an issue if the photo is kept just by people you know (common in analog era) or after you are dead, but otherwise if published[1] it means people can somehow relate to “you” without the actual-you knowing or having met them. Some people may feel some sort of satisfaction from this, others it can make uncomfortable.

          Third, as someone noted, soul could map to another nebulous concept: identity. It could range from problematic cases (someone pretending to be you to resell work you made) to twisted but benign (stories about people making fake profiles pretending to be successful SV employees come to mind).

          [0] If you are secretly photographed[2], this can happen for a number of reasons. Some may imply a missing interaction (if that photographer could not photograph you, maybe they would talk to you instead). Some may be done with intent of sharing your photo in unknown context where again people may relate to you in specific ways that can be unpleasant (e.g., mockery).

          [1] Now when generative models start to be trained on what we thought is our private photos, the idea of “published” is blurred.

          [2] In most cases here “photo” can be swapped with “video”.

          • wkat4242 an hour ago

            > First, for most of us in daily life, once you know you are being photographed you exit any context you were in and enter the new “I am being photographed” context. In some important way, you are stolen from the world around you for a period of time. Your body is still present, but you might be thinking about how this all would look at any later time. This does not apply when photography is specifically arranged by you (common in analog era), or if you are unaware of being a subject photographed (but there may be other concerns about that[0]).

            True, this is something that bothers me a lot too. But especially GenZ has a problem with that (surprising because they grew up with ubiquitous photography) and I see more and more parties that tape off phone cams. They are indeed wonderful.

            I don't agree this doesn't apply when it is arranged though. For me that has always been awkward.

      • b00ty4breakfast 3 hours ago

        As is the wont of industrial society, we had to meticulously design and build our demons.

      • chii 4 hours ago

        > the camera would steal their soul.

        wasn't the camera doing the stealing, but the holder of the photo (facebook in this case)! And it wasn't the soul being stolen, but money!

        • jaza 2 hours ago

          No, I'm pretty sure they're stealing souls. That or kidneys.

      • qntmfred 5 hours ago

        [flagged]

        • phyzix5761 5 hours ago

          Maybe they mean identity by soul which is kind of what's happening here.

        • heavyset_go 4 hours ago

          It's a metaphor.

        • dzhiurgis 5 hours ago

          [flagged]

    • jwr 6 hours ago

      In some countries (notably Poland) Facebook is so burned into people's brains that you can't avoid this, and if you try, people and institutions will consider you a tinfoil hat weirdo and put pressure on you.

      Basically every kindergarten, primary school and high school will want to post pictures.

      • danieldk an hour ago

        Basically every kindergarten, primary school and high school will want to post pictures.

        Here (NL) we get a form at the beginning of each school year to mark which uses of photos we find acceptable. E.g. we allow photos in the school portal (which is private and not owned by big tech), but not on Facebook, etc. It's the way it should be done, because there is not much burden on the parents. If the school also wants to put photos on social media, the burden should be on them to make sure that kids for which they don' have an ack are not put there.

        A bit harder was initially convincing my parents not to put pictures of their granddaughter on Facebook. They are understandably proud and want to show their friends. But they respect it.

        I think in all her life there has only been two violations of our policy. In both cases we contacted the person who published the photo/video and they took it offline.

        You just need enough 'weirdos' to make it normal. I know that there are other parents that agree, but not everyone has the gut to stand up to the social media tyranny, but will join if some people set an example.

        • bojan an hour ago

          Our (NL) elementary school places pictures of the fun activities they do with kids on Instagram, but they blur children's faces, resulting in the photos straight out of the uncanny valley.

          I do wonder also if the blur effect they use is one of those that can easily be reversed. I need to check that one of these days.

          • squigz an hour ago

            > Our (NL) elementary school places pictures of the fun activities they do with kids on Instagram, but they blur children's faces, resulting in the photos straight out of the uncanny valley.

            Honestly what's the point at this point? Are parents not going to send their children to that school because they didn't see pictures of blurry-faced children having fun on the Internet, or is this just teachers wanting to post about their students?

      • mrweasel 2 hours ago

        Same in Denmark. Some companies don't have websites, only a Facebook page, Facebook Marketplace has all but killed the local marketplace sites and pretty much anything related to organized sports and after school activities are coordinated on closed Facebook groups. The last one is the worst one. That's basically telling people that they will hold your child's social life hostage until you join Facebook.

        LinkedIn was used in a similar manor, to coordinate meetups for our local Cloud Native meetups, but the LinkedIn algorithms are much much worse than Facebooks, so people would get "You might be interested in this meetup" two weeks after the event.

        Facebook basically took over communication, no more mailing lists, no more updates on the website, if there even is a website. You just have to accept Facebook if you want to be notified about changes in scheduling, upcoming events or general information about your kids soccer practise.

      • mystifyingpoi 2 hours ago

        For real. I've been searching for a swimming school for our daughter in Poland. The one that looked promising had a contract with clause, giving the school full rights to post any pictures of her in the swimming pool to social media. Of course, parents are strictly prohibited from making ANY photos at all. Fuck them.

      • throwacct 6 hours ago

        I don't care if they label me a weirdo. I agree with OP. Please refrain from posting any pictures of my children. Simple as that.

        • chii 2 hours ago

          i deleted my facebook account over 15 years ago, and people at the time thought i was weird for doing so. I would feel vindicated today, except i dont, because neither my friends nor coworkers have followed, nor want to despite all evidence to the contrary!

    • sebmellen 6 hours ago

      Since Facebook is pulling from the camera roll, not posting is not an adequate defense.

      • zhivota 6 hours ago

        Only logical thing to do personally is to take it completely off your mobile devices. You still get caught in the dragnet if you have friends and family posting you.

        Also in many places WhatsApp is practically a requirement for daily life which is frustrating. What I need is some kind of restricted app sandbox in which to place untrustworthy apps, they see a fake filesystem, fake system calls, etc.

        • danieldk an hour ago

          What I need is some kind of restricted app sandbox in which to place untrustworthy apps, they see a fake filesystem, fake system calls, etc.

          GrapheneOS comes pretty close to that I think? You can put such apps in a separate profile and cut off a lot of permissions. You can also scope contacts, storage, etc.

        • latentsea 6 hours ago

          On Android you can just make a separate user profile for it and do that I suppose.

        • dzhiurgis 5 hours ago

          Caught in what tho?

      • dangus 6 hours ago

        Recent iOS versions have granular controls over library access to prevent this.

        • bnjms 6 hours ago

          It isn’t nice to use though. You select your picture then when you need to add more you’ve got to go back into the settings for that app and select the picture. Then add the picture you selected.

          I’m grateful though. We would have called meta malware back when.

          • what 6 hours ago

            The built in camera roll widget lets you edit what pictures are allowed without going to settings. Maybe it’s a new change or the apps you use have a custom photo picker, I dunno.

          • dangus 6 hours ago

            It’s not that clunky anymore. You can limit access to the library to pick media from and it’ll give you the full library with this message:

            Limited Access to Your Library

            "App" can only access the items that you select. The app can add to your library even if no items are selected.

          • dzhiurgis 5 hours ago

            I try to use web versions of everything (fb, insta, x). If it’s shitty enough I’ll use it less.

            I.e. messenger.com is possible to use if you request desktop version, change font size and deal with all sort of zoom issues. Of course fb doesn’t support actual calls or notifications just because, so I don’t use it.

            Instagram is even sneakier - you can’t post stories via mobile to “close friends”, post videos or view them from instant messages.

            • bigfatkitten 4 hours ago

              There’s some irony in the fact that the company which spawned React has also produced some of the world’s least usable React apps.

              • dzhiurgis an hour ago

                I doubt this is accidental. It’s purely done to push you to install apps.

        • sneak 4 hours ago

          The way you prevent this is by deleting your facebook account and uninstalling the app.

          • wkat4242 2 hours ago

            Most people don't know that hidden Facebook services even come preinstalled on most Android phones and persist even when the main app is deleted :(

            And on Android they're not even the worst privacy player which is Google of course

            • danieldk an hour ago

              Yeah, first thing to do on an Android phone is to use adb or something like the universal debloater to uninstall (besides the Facebook app) crap like: com.facebook.system, com.facebook.appmanager, and com.facebook.services.

              Description of the latter from the uad list:

                  Facebook Services is a tool that lets you manage different Facebook services automatically using your Android device. In particular, the tool focuses on searching for nearby shops and establishments based on your interests.
              
              Why is this even always running on a pristine Samsung, etc. phone? Creepy.
    • huhkerrf 4 hours ago

      I did the same. And then my mother-in-law decided to ignore my requests. And then my mother got angry. And then I caved.

      • fvgvkujdfbllo 3 hours ago

        They are simply addicted to likes and photos of your children can hook them up easily.

    • blindriver 3 hours ago

      There are children who don't even know if they want to be spies or undercover cops when they grow up that have already been identified by facial recognition. There will be an entire generation or more of spies and undercover agents that will have been identified before they had a chance to even contemplate their lives in that field.

    • pkkkzip 6 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • tock 5 hours ago

        I was writing a response before realising this profile is an AI agent. Is this seriously allowed on HN? The bio reads: "It's largely for my amusement and I like to play games."

      • Aeolun 5 hours ago

        They can use Facebook however they want. They just can’t upload pictures taken of other people without consent. That has nothing to do with Facebook and everything with generally applicable laws.

  • windex 12 minutes ago

    zuck needs to fade into irrelevance. The guy hasnt done anything interesting in years. Every few years he raids private data and thinks he can do something with it.

  • goku12 7 hours ago

    This is truly egregious. Facebook and Instagram are installed by default on many android phones and cannot be fully uninstalled. And even if asked for consent, many people may choose the harmful option by mistake or due to lack of awareness. It's alarming that these companies cannot be held to even the bare minimum standards of ethics.

    As an aside, there was a discussion a few days back where someone argued that being locked in to popular and abusive social/messaging platforms like these is an acceptable compromise, if it means retaining online contacts with everyone you know. Well, this is precisely the sort of apathy that gives these platforms the power to abuse their marketshare so blatantly. However, it doesn't affect only the people who choose to be irresponsible about privacy. It also drags the ignorant and the unwilling participants under the influence of these spyware.

    • ethagnawl 3 hours ago

      This is why I just spent weeks tracking down a modern device that I could vendor unlock and install LineageOS on. It's no longer possible on recent OnePlus devices and many people selling other brands on Swappa and Amazon claim their devices are vendor unlockable when they're actually just carrier unlockable. I don't want any vendor's crapware running on my device. I hate that I "have to" use Google Play to function in the modern world but Lineage and MindTheGapps is at least a less bad way to go.

      I should sit down and try something like postmarketOS or Mobian as a portable Linux machine is what I really want ...

      • goku12 2 hours ago

        That's what I plan to do too. My current device is locked down pretty aggressively. But the problem here is, what percentage of the population has the skill and patience to do it? These companies need to hold only a simple majority of the population hostage. The holdouts like you or me can be eventually peer pressured into accepting the same abuse.

        For example, let's say that you avoid a certain abusive messaging platform. But what if your bank or some other essential institution insist on using it to provide their service? We can complain all they want. But they will probably just neglect you until you concede in despair.

        To fight this, you need affordable and ethical alternatives for the device, platform and applications. You also would need either regulation or widespread public awareness. Honestly, the current situation is hopeless on that front.

    • ethan_smith 7 hours ago

      You can use ADB (Android Debug Bridge) to disable pre-installed Facebook/Instagram apps without root via `pm disable-user` commands, effectively preventing them from running or collecting data.

      • dylan604 6 hours ago

        which what, 0.5% of users will know and be able to do?

        • esseph 6 hours ago

          That number is way way way way way too high

      • goku12 5 hours ago

        That's what I did. But as others point out, how many know about this? And modifications are getting harder by the year. They are relying on these factors to ensure that the majority of the population remains exploitable.

      • baobun 4 hours ago

        Bettet make it a script or ansible playbook from the start since you will need to reapply it after system updates.

      • tjpnz 4 hours ago

        I don't want their shit on my phone at all. Can I remove it entirely?

  • toofy 7 hours ago

    how long until we find out that the brand new government/palantir deal is using these photos as well against citizens?

    i give it a year or less.

    • Animats 5 hours ago

      > i give it a year or less.

      Yesterday.[1]

      [1] https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2025/06/26/jd-vance-me...

      • blub 4 hours ago

        According to the thread on /r/europe that person smoked weed and lied about it on their immigration form.

        • samtheprogram 2 hours ago

          I would love a source about the immigration form. That would at least make more sense. Weed is legal in half of the US. As a citizen, I find the story troubling.

          The tweets just saying “drug use” and then you hear it’s weed is ridiculous. Why wouldn’t they just state that they lied on their immigration form about drug use?

        • hedora 4 hours ago

          So, they engaged in behavior that’s legal at Facebook HQ?

          In other news, FB has been using whatsapp metadata to coordinate genocide campaigns in Gaza. What’d all those dead civilians (including infants) do, again?

          Presumably they signed a TOS, so it’s OK.

    • bigiain 5 hours ago

      I look forward to the schadenfreude I will feel when someone makes the right FOI request and we discover this "feature" was built by Meta at the request of the NSA or the FBI or some other government TLA.

    • dzhiurgis 4 hours ago

      If you have so much trouble government I don’t think deleting facebook will change anything.

  • jbombadil 7 hours ago
  • Jackson__ 4 hours ago

    Curious, is this really necessary? I'd assume the subtotal of public images posted on meta services to be in the trillions.

    • ipsum2 4 hours ago

      I imagine many people will react only to the headline and not read the article, but:

      "Meta tells The Verge that, for now, it’s not training on your unpublished photos with this new feature. “[The Verge’s headline] implies we are currently training our AI models with these photos, which we aren’t. This test doesn’t use people’s photos to improve or train our AI models,”

      As someone who is familiar with the ML space, it seems unlikely that the addition of private photos will significantly improve models, as you have mentioned.

      • ejstronge an hour ago

        > I imagine many people will react only to the headline and not read the article [...]

        I saw this line in the article: "Meta tells The Verge that it’s not currently training its AI models on those photos, but it would not answer our questions about whether it might do so in future, or what rights it will hold over your camera roll images."

        It would seem important to share this with people who may 'not read the article'

        • squigz an hour ago

          Shouldn't it have zero rights over your "camera roll images", which implies to me to be photos saved to a phone but not yet uploaded to Facebook?

    • mupuff1234 4 hours ago

      Probably for personalization.

  • AJ007 7 hours ago

    Very helpful for ad targeting. As Apple kills tracking and ramps up its own ad business, Meta will need to collect as many signals as possible.

    • cameldrv 3 hours ago

      Yeah holy crap can you imagine the data goldmine of all the things they could know about you from analyzing every photo you ever take with AI?

  • 31 minutes ago
    [deleted]
  • aetherspawn 6 hours ago

    iOS -> Settings -> Privacy and Security -> Photos -> Facebook -> Set limited access

    • msgodel 6 hours ago

      You'd have to block nearly every app from ever seeing any image you don't want Facebook getting ahold of including apps that are made by other companies. Almost everyone uses their libraries, they practically have a shell on your phone (which is funny because you're not allowed that on your own device for "security.")

      • hedora 4 hours ago

        As much as I’m annoyed when my iPhone makes me do the dumb “give access to these photos to the app” dance, I’m happy they block that, at least.

        However, I wish they’d grow a pair and just outright block the FB and other similar dependencies that make such stuff necessary.

  • JimDabell 2 hours ago

    This article seems false.

    > On Friday, TechCrunch reported that Facebook users trying to post something on the Story feature have encountered pop-up messages asking if they’d like to opt into “cloud processing”, which would allow Facebook to “select media from your camera roll and upload it to our cloud on a regular basis”, to generate “ideas like collages, recaps, AI restyling or themes like birthdays or graduations.”

    > By allowing this feature, the message continues, users are agreeing to Meta AI terms, which allows their AI to analyze “media and facial features” of those unpublished photos, as well as the date said photos were taken, and the presence of other people or objects in them. You further grant Meta the right to “retain and use” that personal information.

    The straightforward explanation is this: they have a feature where it is helpful to group people together. For instance suggesting a photo of you and a friend to be posted on their birthday. In order to make this work, they need to perform facial recognition, so they ask for permission using their standard terms.

    Can they train their AI with it? Yes, you are giving them permission to do so. Does the information available tell us that is what they are doing? No, it does not. In fact, a Meta spokesperson said this:

    > “These suggestions are opt-in only and only shown to you – unless you decide to share them – and can be turned off at any time,” she continued. “Camera roll media may be used to improve these suggestions, but are not used to improve AI models in this test.”

    https://techcrunch.com/2025/06/27/facebook-is-asking-to-use-...

    Could they be lying about this? Sure, I guess. But don’t publish an article saying that they are doing it, when you have no evidence to show that they are doing this and they say they aren’t doing this.

    Might they do it in the future? Sure, I guess. But don’t publish an article saying that they are doing it, if the best you have is speculation about what they might do in the future.

    Does it make sense for them to do this? Not really. They’ve already got plenty of training data. Will your private photos really move the needle for them? Almost certainly not. Will it be worth the PR fallout? Definitely not.

    Should you grant them permission if you don’t want them to train on your private photos? No.

    This could have been a decent article if they were clearer about what is fact and what is speculation. But they overreached and said that Facebook is doing something when that is not evident at all. That crosses the line into dishonesty for me.

    • BiteCode_dev 2 hours ago

      This comment should be the top one. I hate FB and I do believe they train their AI using this, but it's a believe, it's speculations.

  • squigz an hour ago

    Hasn't Facebook (and pretty much all major social media platforms) had a clause in their TOS giving them a license to whatever you upload to their services, since forever?

  • IncreasePosts 6 hours ago

    I wonder how many pieces of code at facebook there are with guards like

        if (userId == 1) {
          // don't add mark's data to training set
        }
    • polyomino 6 hours ago

      Mark's user id is 4

      • IncreasePosts 3 hours ago

        Lame, it already jumped the shark by then

    • samlinnfer 6 hours ago

      Don’t worry, I upload Zuck’s photos to facebook for him.

    • SoftTalker 6 hours ago

      LOL at the idea that he uses Facebook. None of the silicon valley bigwigs or their kids have anything to do with social media tech except in perhaps very controlled, orchestrated ways. The normal users are just "dumb fucks."

  • kevingadd 6 hours ago

    This seems like a liability nightmare. If they're just scanning all the image files on people's devices and using them for training, they're inevitably going to scoop up nudes without permission, not to mention the occasional CSAM or gore photo, right? Why would you want to risk having stuff like that sneak into your training set when you already have access to all people's public photos?

    • latentsea 6 hours ago

      The purpose of a system is what it does. To that end it could actually be a plot by the CIA to find targets with this type of material on their devices, which can then be used against them to turn them into assets.

    • heavyset_go 4 hours ago

      It's simple, they don't care.

    • sebmellen 6 hours ago

      I’m sure they use a provider like Hive to scan all the photos before processing them.

    • tjpnz 3 hours ago

      I doubt anyone who works there would care.

  • ChrisArchitect 5 hours ago
  • jurschreuder an hour ago

    They're also developing VR glasses.

    The company that is destroying children's mental health with phone addiction is developing VR glasses.

    I guess nobody cares

  • msgodel 6 hours ago

    Neat-O.

    Maybe this will finally convince people to throw out their smartphones.

  • xyst 4 hours ago

    Data and people are the commodity in this Ai gold rush. Primary benefactors are big tech.

  • deadbabe 4 hours ago

    Would it be any better if Facebook hired photographers to walk around cities and major events and just photograph random people doing stuff? AI will get hungrier.

    • abhinavk 14 minutes ago

      They will sell a product that people will use to photograph random people doing stuff.

    • setnone 2 hours ago

      I heard something about meta glasses

  • dzhiurgis 4 hours ago

    Wonder if you could ddos it by taking selfies with ai generated faces in background.

  • ashdksnndck 6 hours ago

    The Verge’s clickbait headline makes it sound like Facebook is using private photos without the user’s knowledge/consent. The paywalled next paragraph explains that this is not the case.

    The non-paywalled TechCrunch story shows the consent screen that people agree to before Facebook uses the photos in this way: https://techcrunch.com/2025/06/27/facebook-is-asking-to-use-...

    I encourage everyone to look at that screenshot and decide for yourself if the media coverage is reasonable here.

    • alex1138 6 hours ago

      Facebook has, though, historically been less than honest about consent

      I bet "agree to" is "we clicked the box for you anyway"

      • dylan604 6 hours ago

        Oops, we totally didn't mean to, but an undiscovered bug did not obey the check box and slurped in everything anyways.

        • bigiain 5 hours ago

          "Somebody moved fast and broke things. We have no idea why they thought that was appropriate behaviour on production systems, it's completely against company policy."

          It's surprising(not) how that class of error always seems to fall on the side of Facebook grabbing more data without consent, and never on the side of accidentally increasing user privacy.

          • ashdksnndck 5 hours ago

            How would you know? If Facebook has a bug that accidentally increases user privacy, does The Verge write an article about it?

        • jiggawatts 6 hours ago

          My KPIs? I don’t see what my new Lamborghini has to do with anything!

      • ashdksnndck 5 hours ago

        Maybe you should get a job at The Verge!

        I’m sure if you log the Facebook app’s network traffic on your phone and show that it uploads photos without you clicking on the agree button, they’ll happily publish an article about your findings.

      • shakna 6 hours ago

        They trained on libgen without qualms. There's little reason to suspect they'll give the rest of their users more respect.

      • JKCalhoun 6 hours ago

        Curious about accounts that have been deactivated/deleted.

        • bigiain 5 hours ago

          Mine has been deleted for almost 10 years now. I fully assume they've retained and are mining every post I made, every photo I uploaded, and every interaction I ever had on FB, and are still using FB tracking pixels on every website running them to feed more data about me into my profile - and are not only selling that to advertisers but are now training their AI on it without consent at every opportunity.

    • eviks 4 hours ago

      > The Verge’s clickbait headline makes it sound like Facebook is using private photos without the user’s knowledge/consent.

      Nah, that's the company's reputation that appends malice in your mind to an innocent headline

      • ashdksnndck 4 hours ago

        And most people who commented on the article, who presumably got stopped by the paywall. It’s almost like we have a trapped prior that is impairing our ability to interpret new information on this subject.

    • gessha 4 hours ago

      Facebook deserves not only the negative media coverage but a thick antitrust case shattering this demon blood-soaked company into billions of pieces. Since when has Facebook cared about consent? Just look through the recent news about them tracking users on Android, the VPN(s) scandal, psychology experiments, and god knows what else.

    • paulnpace 6 hours ago

      What does something like this look like from the other side? Do users just agree to everything put in their face? The copy there sounds like it's a really convenient fun new thing.

      • msgodel 6 hours ago

        Have you ever watched a "normal" person interact with a modal dialog? They don't even read it, they'll just spam whatever button they think will make it go away.

    • wat10000 6 hours ago

      The plans were available in the basement, behind the door that says “beware of the leopard.”

      Nothing on that screen says they’re using your photos for training. I’m sure it’s in the linked terms, but Facebook knows those won’t be read.

      • ashdksnndck 5 hours ago

        The consent screen says “upload it to our cloud on an ongoing basis” and “analyzed by meta AI”. To me that seems like a reasonable level of explanation for non-technical users. Most people don’t know what it means to “train” an AI, but reading that meta is processing the photos in the cloud and analyzing them with AI gives them some picture.

        This isn’t buried. The user has to see the screen and click accept for their photos to be uploaded.

        Compared to the usual buried disclaimers and vague references to “improving services,” consenting to 1000 things when you sign up for an account, this is pretty transparent. If someone is concerned, they at least have a clear opportunity to decline before anything gets uploaded.

        It’s just surprising to me that people look at this example of Facebook going out of their way to not do the bad thing and respond with a bunch of comments about how they doing the bad thing.

        • basilgohar 4 hours ago

          This is a pretty generous take. You even highlight most people won't know what this means and then handwave away the concerns of people who DO know what it means and assert most people won't accept it if they did understand it.

          • ashdksnndck 4 hours ago

            > assert most people won't accept it if they did understand it

            I didn’t make that assertion. I think most people don’t care if their photos are used to train an AI model as long as Facebook doesn’t post the photos publicly. Fundamentally, I care if people see my photos, and don’t care if computers see them. But I’m aware some people dislike AI and/or have strong beliefs about how data should be used and disagree. It makes sense to give those people an opportunity to say no, so it seems like a good thing that the feature is opt-in rather than an opt-out buried in a menu.

        • wat10000 3 hours ago

          People are not going to understand it that way. You know it, I know it, and Facebook knows it. Don’t excuse them for hiding what they’re doing on the basis that people don’t know what it means anyway. I’m pretty sure the average moron can understand “training AI,” considering that both “training” and “AI” are pretty common concepts. Sure, they won’t be able to explain gradient descent and whatever, but “training AI” is something people will recognize as using your data to improve their stuff.

          • ashdksnndck 3 hours ago

            Granted, many people could guess what “train” means, but it’s not obvious if on average people will be more likely to read and understand that than the words “analyze” and “create ideas” they choose to use instead.

            • wat10000 3 hours ago

              In context, those sound like things they’re going to do for you. People are not going to understand this as “we’re going to use your stuff for our own purposes unrelated to the services you get.”

              Here’s the thing. Even if we grant your idea that maybe this is more understandable, why would that be reasonable? Facebook employs a lot of very smart people and has enormous resources. I’m confident they could come up with wording that would make this very clear to everyone. I mean, “we will use your photos to build our next generation AI systems” is a lot clearer than what they have here, and I just came up with that on the spot. That they haven’t done so is a deliberate choice.

              • ashdksnndck 2 hours ago

                According to the company spokesperson quoted by TechCrunch, they aren’t using the photos to train models, which is probably why they didn’t put that in the dialog.