Collaborative posts on Instagram? New feature allows friends to Join in

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Collaborative posts on Instagram? New feature allows friends to Join in
Collaborative posts on Instagram? New feature allows friends to Join in

Delhi : Instagram, the picture and video sharing network owned by Meta, is now testing a new feature that lets users edit their friends' posts using images and videos. Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri revealed the function during a webcast on the social media network. Users may add images and videos to posts by clicking the 'Add to post' button, which appears in the bottom left corner of the post. The original person who posted the content will still have the last say over it, though. To learn more about this future feature, continue reading.

An update on Instagram allows you to attach images to posts by other users.

As previously announced, the new functionality may eventually allow you to attach images or videos to posts made by other users. It is necessary for the person whose post the image or video was added to authorize the addition. As of right now, Instagram carousel posts can have up to ten images or videos in them. It is conceivable that the platform will raise this restriction if this functionality is activated. However, as of right now, the corporation has not provided any confirmation.

Furthermore, the company is considering implementing a function that would enable users to use a brief or looping video as their Notes profile image. We will learn more about these features over time as not much has been disclosed about them yet. According to reports, Instagram wants to increase user engagement with these kinds of features.

Meta's AI is trained using postings from Instagram.

During the Connect launch event last month, Meta introduced its own AI helper. A Reuters story from shortly after the AI assistant's debut claimed that it was trained on publicly accessible Facebook and Instagram postings. According to the report, Meta's President of Global Affairs, Nick Clegg, stated that the AI assistant the business just released was mostly trained on publicly accessible Facebook and Instagram data. This indicates that Meta AI was trained using the images and videos that people uploaded to the public. The corporation did not utilize the photos and videos that were shared with intimate friends alone.

Clegg also mentioned that Meta didn't train the chatbot using any of its users' private interactions. Along with this, the corporation filtered sensitive information out of publicly available training datasets. Clegg stated that the "vast majority" of the data that Meta utilized for training was openly available. "We've tried to exclude datasets that have a heavy preponderance of personal information," Clegg said. For example, Meta did not utilize LinkedIn since it held user-private material.