Facebook is asking users for access to their phoneโs camera roll to automatically suggest AI-edited versions of their photos โ including ones that havenโt been uploaded to Facebook yet.
The feature is being suggested to Facebook users when theyโre creating a new Story on the social networking app. Here, a screen pops up and asks if the user will opt into โcloud processingโ to allow creative suggestions.
As the pop-up message explains, by clicking โAllow,โ youโll let Facebook generate new ideas from your camera roll, like collages, recaps, AI restylings, or photo themes. To work, Facebook says it will upload media from your camera roll to its cloud (meaning its servers) on an โongoing basis,โ based on information like time, location, or themes.
The message also notes that only you can see the suggestions, and the media isnโt used for ad targeting.
However, by tapping โAllow,โ you are agreeing to Metaโs AI Terms of Service. This allows your media and facial features to be analyzed by AI, it says. The company will additionally use the date and presence of people or objects in your photos to craft its creative ideas.
The creative tool is another example of the slippery slope that comes with sharing our personal media with AI providers. Like other tech giants, Meta has grand AI ambitions. Being able to tap into the personal photos users havenโt yet shared on Facebookโs social network could give the company an advantage in the AI race.
Unfortunately for end users, in tech companiesโ rush to stay ahead, itโs not always clear what theyโre agreeing to when features like this appear.

According to Metaโs AI Terms around image processing, โonce shared, you agree that Meta will analyze those images, including facial features, using AI. This processing allows us to offer innovative new features, including the ability to summarize image contents, modify images, and generate new content based on the image,โ the text states.
The same AI terms also give Metaโs AI the right to โretain and useโ any personal information youโve shared in order to personalize its AI outputs. The company notes that it can review your interactions with its AI, including conversations, and those reviews may be conducted by humans. The terms donโt define what Meta considers personal information, beyond saying it includes โinformation you submit as Prompts, Feedback, or other Content.โ
We have to wonder whether the photos youโve shared for โcloud processingโ also count here.
So far, there hasnโt been much backlash about this feature. A handful of Facebook users have stumbled across the AI-generated photo suggestions when creating a new story and raised questions about it. For instance, one user on Reddit found that Facebook had pulled up an old photo (in this case, one that had previously been shared to the social network) and automatically turned it into an anime using Meta AI.
When another user in an anti-AI Facebook group asked for help shutting this feature off, the search led to a section called camera roll sharing suggestions in the appโs Settings.

We also found this feature under Facebookโs Settings, where itโs listed in the Preferences section.
On the โCamera roll sharing suggestionsโ page, there are two toggles. The first lets Facebook suggest photos from your camera roll when browsing the app. The second (which should be opt-in based on the pop-up that requested permission in Stories) is where you could enable or disable the โcloud processing,โ which lets Meta make AI images using your camera roll photos.
This additional access to use AI on your camera rollโs photos does not appear to be new.
We found posts from earlier this year where confused Facebook users were sharing screenshots of the pop-up message that appeared in their Stories section. Meta has also published complete Help Documentation about the feature for both iOS and Android users.
Metaโs AI terms have been enforceable as of June 23, 2024; we canโt compare the current AI terms with older versions because Meta doesnโt keep a record, and previously published terms havenโt been properly saved by the Internet Archiveโs Wayback Machine.
Since this feature dips into your camera roll, however, it extends beyond what Meta had previously announced, in terms of training its AI on your publicly shared data, including posts and comments on Facebook and Instagram. (EU users had until May 27, 2025, to opt out.)
Reached for comment, Meta spokesperson Maria Cubeta confirmed the feature is a test, saying, โWeโre exploring ways to make content sharing easier for people on Facebook by testing suggestions of ready-to-share and curated content from a personโs camera roll.โ
โThese suggestions are opt-in only and only shown to you โ unless you decide to share them โ and can be turned off at any time,โ she continued. โCamera roll media may be used to improve these suggestions, but are not used to improve AI models in this test.โ
The company is currently testing suggestions in the U.S. and Canada.
Updated after publication with Facebookโs comments.


