It doesn’t matter whether you’re scrolling YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Spotify, or even browsing for educational articles online—there’s more AI slop in our feeds than ever before, and less human-made content. Instagram has been one of the clearest examples of AI content’s rise on social media, with some AI-generated models racking up more followers than most aspiring influencers could dream of.
In response, Instagram boss Adam Mosseri has promised to support authentic and “raw” creators on the platform, hinting at new tools to help human creators. In a post on Threads, Mosseri argued that authenticity is “fast becoming a scarce resource,” but that this will “drive more demand for creator content, not less.” Mosseri said “flattering imagery”—for example, edited selfies with no blemishes or high-contrast travel snaps—“is cheap to produce and boring to consume.”
“People want content that feels real,” he added.
“We are going to see a significant acceleration of a more raw aesthetic over the next few years,” Mosseri said, predicting that savvy creators will increasingly lean into explicitly unproduced and unflattering images of themselves.
“In a world where everything can be perfected, imperfection becomes a signal.”
Mosseri also acknowledged the scale of the slop problem facing social media platforms, predicting that although “all the major platforms will do good work identifying AI content,” they will “get worse at it over time as AI gets better at imitating reality.”
In terms of practical takeaways, Mosseri suggested it may be “more practical to fingerprint real media than fake media” on Instagram. He suggested that camera manufacturers could cryptographically sign images at capture, creating a technical seal of authenticity.
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Mosseri said Instagram needs to “surface credibility signals about who’s posting so people can decide who to trust,” as well as “continue to improve ranking for originality.” Finally, he said Instagram also needs to roll out new creative tools, both AI-enabled and traditional, to help human creators compete with increasingly advanced AI. But Mosseri didn’t officially announce any new features or timelines for when they could be introduced.
It’s not just Instagram that seems to be acknowledging the slop epidemic. In November, TikTok rolled out a new feature as part of its Manage Topics menu, allowing users to see less AI-generated content (even if it doesn’t remove it entirely). This is something Instagram hasn’t yet rolled out a specific option for as of the time of writing. Instagram, alongside Facebook and Threads, did roll out labels for AI-generated content in 2024, but the labeling depends on user disclosure or the platform being able to detect it, meaning large amounts of AI content still appears without AI labels.
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I’ve been a PC gamer since you had to install games from multiple CD-ROMs by hand. As a reporter, I’m passionate about the intersection of tech and human lives. I’ve covered everything from crypto scandals to the art world, as well as conspiracy theories, UK politics, and Russia and foreign affairs.
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