Meta to label images on Facebook and Instagram which were created by AI

7 February 2024, 09:54

Meta logo
Meta to label AI images on Facebook. Picture: PA

The social media platform said it is developing tools which will detect AI-generated images and label them when posted on one of its apps.

Meta is to begin labelling images posted to Facebook, Instagram and Threads that it detects have been created using AI, the company has announced.

The social media giant said it was currently building the capability and will roll it out across its social platforms in the “coming months” and ahead of a number of major global elections this year.

Meta already places a label on images created using its own AI, but said its new capability will enable it to label images created by AI from Google, OpenAI, Microsoft, Adobe, Midjourney and Shutterstock as part of an industry-wide effort to use “best practice” and place “invisible markers” onto images and their metadata to help identify them as AI-generated.

Former deputy prime minister, Sir Nick Clegg, now president of global affairs for Meta, acknowledged the potential ability for bad actors to utilise AI-generated imagery to spread disinformation as a key reason for Meta introducing the feature.

“This work is especially important as this is likely to become an increasingly adversarial space in the years ahead,” he said.

“People and organisations that actively want to deceive people with AI-generated content will look for ways around safeguards that are put in place to detect it.

“Across our industry and society more generally, we’ll need to keep looking for ways to stay one step ahead.

“In the meantime, it’s important people consider several things when determining if content has been created by AI, like checking whether the account sharing the content is trustworthy or looking for details that might look or sound unnatural.”

A number of prominent politicians, including Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and Mayor of London Sadiq Khan have been the targets of manipulated media or deepfakes in recent months.

In a blog post on the announcement, Sir Nick also confirmed that including markers in audio and video content was not yet being used on the same scale, so Meta’s tool would not yet apply to any such content created by other companies which had then been shared on Meta’s platforms.

He added that Meta was adding a tool for users to voluntarily “disclose when they share AI-generated video or audio so we can add a label to it”.

“We’ll require people to use this disclosure and label tool when they post organic content with a photorealistic video or realistic-sounding audio that was digitally created or altered, and we may apply penalties if they fail to do so,” he said.

“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.”

Sir Nick said it was also not yet possible to identify all AI-generated content, but that Meta was “working hard” on tools that could automatically do so.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Luke Littler gesturing to the crowd

Luke Littler and Oasis among top-trending Google searches in UK in 2024

A ChapGPT logo on a smartphone

OpenAI launches video generation tool Sora

An Amazon Echo Show device on a wall

Taylor Swift and Bitcoin named among the most popular Alexa queries of 2024

The Chat GPT website

OpenAI unveils new 200 dollars-a-month ChatGPT Pro subscription

The lights on the front panel of a broadband internet router

Full-fibre broadband reaches nearly 70% of UK homes – Ofcom

UK trials first interactive public breathalyser to curb drink-driving during festive season.

UK pub debuts first interactive breathalyser to help tackle drink-driving during festive season

A child using a mobile phone

Parents urged to be vigilant about children’s online safety over Christmas

Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool

Data from hospital cyber attack ‘could be released before NHS can investigate’

British singer Charli XCX dressed in a black dress and dark sunglasses at the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition Preview Party 2023 – London

Brat summer and ‘demure’ make-up feature in TikTok’s top trends of 2024

A woman using her mobile phone

Virgin Media O2 expands National Databank access to all O2 stores

Exclusive
Ministers are looking at relaxing the Tory government's TikTok ban in a bid to woo younger voters online, LBC understands.

Ministers eye TikTok comeback to reach younger voters despite security concerns

Telegram Messenger stock

Telegram to work with internet watchdog on child sexual abuse material crackdown

The GCHQ building in Cheltenham (GCHQ)

‘Broader and deeper’ online risk to UK from criminals and state-backed hackers

Riot police at a demonstration outside a hotel in Rotherham (

Oversight Board to examine Facebook posts about summer riots

The Microsoft logo

Microsoft facing £1 billion legal claim from UK businesses

A rendering of a computer chip with a human brain image superimposed on it

Most people happy to share health data to develop artificial intelligence – poll