Meta rolled out Muse Image on July 8, 2026, and it sparked immediate backlash. The new AI image-generation feature lets anyone on Instagram tag your public account and use your photos as source material for AI-generated images. No permission needed, no notification sent.
Only private accounts and users under 18 are automatically excluded. Every other public Instagram profile is opted in by default.

What Exactly Does Muse Image Do?
Muse Image is Meta’s new AI image model from the Meta Superintelligence Labs. It competes with OpenAI’s GPT Images 2.0 and Google’s Nano Banana 2. The feature integrates directly into Instagram, allowing users to generate original images, edit existing photos, and even create custom ads.
The controversial part: when generating an AI image, users can tag any public Instagram account. Meta AI then pulls photos from that account to build the generated image. Think of it as a stranger feeding your vacation photos into an AI blender to create something new, without asking you first.
How to Opt Out (Step by Step)
The setting isn’t where you’d expect it. Here’s exactly where to find it:
- Open the Instagram app
- Tap your profile in the bottom right
- Tap the three horizontal lines in the top-right corner
- Scroll down to “Sharing and reuse”
- Find “Allow people to use your content on Instagram with AI features on Meta”
- Toggle the setting off for both Posts and Reels
The fastest alternative: set your account to private. That blocks the feature entirely, though you lose the ability for non-followers to see your content.
Meta’s Track Record Makes This Worse
This isn’t the first time Meta has defaulted users into sharing data without clear consent. In 2019, the FTC hit Facebook with a $5 billion fine for violating a consent order related to how the platform handled user information. That fine followed the Cambridge Analytica scandal, where data from up to 87 million Facebook users was harvested through a personality quiz app.
The Pew Research Center found that 35% of respondents in a recent survey said they’re more concerned than excited about the growing use of artificial intelligence. Features like Muse Image, where your photos become AI training material by default, are exactly why that number is climbing.
Can You Delete Existing AI Images Made From Your Photos?
According to Instagram’s help center, switching to private or adjusting the sharing setting will prevent new AI images from being generated using your content. But any AI images already created using your photos will not be removed. There’s no tool to retroactively purge existing generations.
Other Platforms Doing the Same Thing
Meta isn’t alone. Google recently updated its privacy settings to store more user data, including “images, files, and audio and video recordings,” to improve its AI models. On Google Search, any media you upload is now being used to train AI unless you specifically opt out through the Web & App Activity settings.
The pattern across tech companies is consistent: default to training on your data, bury the opt-out deep in settings, and hope most users never find it.
What to Do Right Now
Don’t wait for another company to announce a similar feature. Open Instagram, navigate to the Sharing and reuse setting, and toggle it off. Then check Google’s Web & App Activity settings to make sure you’re not opted into AI training there either. These settings take about 30 seconds to change but protect every photo you’ve ever posted.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does switching my Instagram account to private stop AI image generation?
Yes. Private accounts and accounts belonging to users under 18 are automatically excluded from Muse Image. Switching to private is the simplest way to block the feature entirely.
Can I see who has generated AI images using my Instagram photos?
No. Meta does not provide a way to see which users have tagged your account in AI image prompts or what images were generated from your content.
Will turning off the setting delete AI images already created from my photos?
No. The setting only prevents future AI image generation using your content. Any images already created will remain available. There is no way to request their deletion through Instagram’s current tools.
Is this feature available outside the US?
As of July 2026, the Instagram updates for Muse Image are rolling out first in the US. International availability has not been announced yet, but Meta typically expands features globally within weeks.
What other AI data collection should I be worried about?
Google recently changed its privacy settings to include media uploads in AI training data. Go to myaccount.google.com, navigate to Data & Privacy, and check your Web & App Activity settings. You can disable the toggle for including audio, video, and image data in AI training.
