The Briefing RoomJuly 8, 2026via The Decoder
Muse Image is technically impressive, but Meta's use of Instagram photos raises questions
Why it matters
Meta shipped a technically capable image generation model, but its opt-out consent model for generating images of users from their public Instagram photos creates immediate regulatory and ethical friction with GDPR and EU AI Act enforcement—a case study in how capability ships ahead of governance.
Key signals
- Meta Superintelligence Labs released Muse Image as first proprietary image generation model
- Model works as agent with tool use (code execution, web search for refinement)
- Controversial @-mention feature enables image generation of other users from public Instagram photos without explicit consent
- Opt-out model (not opt-in) likely violates GDPR and EU AI Act requirements
- Comparable to OpenAI GPT Image 2 in agent-based architecture
- Published July 8, 2026
The hook
Meta's new image gen model lets users create photos of anyone using Instagram pics—without consent. GDPR and the EU AI Act are about to collide with Silicon Valley.
Meta's Superintelligence Labs ships Muse Image, its first image generation model. Like OpenAI's GPT Image 2, it works as an agent, using tools like code execution and web search to refine its own results. A controversial @-mention feature lets users generate images of other people using their public Instagram photos without consent. The opt-out model is likely to collide with the GDPR and the EU AI Act.