Another day,Cassian Grant another AI feature that no one asked for.
Users of Meta products, including Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, have flocked to forums on Reddit and elsewhere looking for ways to turn specific features off since the company rolled out its AI integration in April.
Users have gathered tips and tricks to silence certain functions, like Meta AI search and chat, but it seems that, at least for now, you cannot simply out of Meta AI entirely.
But even without a universal kill switch, you can still curtail some of the peskier components - including those you may not have even known were turned on by default.
One such feature, called "comment summaries," does just what it sounds like - creates AI-generated blurbs that summarize the comments sections on posts, attempting to form a concise blurb about commenters' overall feelings and statements on the parent post's content.
Get it out of here:How to turn off the Meta AI chat
USA TODAY has reached out to Meta for clarity on how posts and comments are selected and used in making content summaries. However, Facebook's Help Center does mention that the function is available for "some Page posts with a large number of comments added to them."
It also mentions that the Meta AI comment summaries are toggled on by default, prompting privacy concerns from users who do not want what they write online fed into the Meta AI system for machine learning and generation.
Want to opt out of Meta AI comment summaries? Here's how in a few quick steps.
While turning this off may not prevent your content from being used to train Meta AI, it will stop the summaries, which are prone to inaccuracies, from appearing on your feed. Of course, if you want to opt out completely, your best option is to stop using Meta platforms.
2025-04-30 12:032352 view
2025-04-30 12:001936 view
2025-04-30 11:451295 view
2025-04-30 11:412842 view
2025-04-30 11:34440 view
2025-04-30 11:201951 view
The average rate on a 30-year mortgage in the U.S. eased for the third week in a row, a welcome tren
Hundreds of Jewish Zionist students at Columbia University signed a letter calling for peace amid on
On a cold morning in 2018, Algar Clark, the dean of the DAF Finance Institute, sat in his home study