Meta has been secretly enabling camera roll sharing suggestions on Facebook, allowing it to analyze and retain users' private photos without clear consent, raising significant privacy concerns. Users have reported finding these features turned on without their knowledge, despite Meta stating they are not enabled by default, and the feature is currently in testing in the US and Canada.
Meta is testing a feature that automatically accesses and analyzes users' camera roll photos for AI-powered suggestions, often enabled by default without clear consent, raising significant privacy concerns. Users can check and disable this feature in their app settings to protect their privacy.
Meta has introduced a new AI photo feature on Facebook that can access and upload users' photos and videos from the past 30 days for creative suggestions, raising privacy concerns. Users can opt-in or out of this feature, which is currently in testing in the US and Canada, but it involves Meta's continued access to their media content, even if not posted publicly.
Meta is requesting access to users' private photos, including unpublished ones, under the guise of improving AI suggestions, but it remains unclear if or how these images will be used for AI training, raising significant privacy concerns.
Meta is testing a feature that requests Facebook users' permission to access their camera roll photos for AI-driven editing and suggestions, raising privacy concerns due to its history with data security. Users are advised to decline the prompt and review app permissions to protect their personal data.
Facebook is testing a feature that uses Meta AI to generate content ideas from users' camera rolls, with opt-in options and assurances that media won't be used for ad targeting or AI training, though concerns about privacy remain.
Facebook is requesting access to users' camera rolls to suggest AI-edited photos, including unshared images, through a feature that uploads media to Meta's cloud for AI processing. Users can opt in or out via settings, but agreeing to this grants Meta broad rights to analyze and retain personal media, raising privacy concerns amid Meta's AI ambitions.
iOS 16.4 includes hidden features such as Voice Isolation for cellular calls, the return of the Apple Books page curl animation, and the ability to detect duplicates in iCloud Shared Photo libraries. To access these features, users need to know where to look in the settings.