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Buried inside Facebook’s latest update is a feature that quietly reframes every public post you’ve ever written. Meta’s new AI Mode, reported by TechCrunch in mid-June 2026, replaces the platform’s traditional search with conversational answers synthesized from public posts, Groups, and Reels. Think Google’s AI summaries pulled from Reddit — except sourced from Facebook’s 3 billion users. For most users, there is no off switch.
Natural-language search meets unvetted crowd wisdom.
Type a question into Facebook search and AI Mode returns a synthesized answer instead of a list of posts to scroll through. Meta’s Forum app does something similar with its “Ask” tab, mining Group discussions into a searchable knowledge base. Both run on Meta’s Llama 3 model. The convenience is real — until you realize the “experts” behind those answers are whoever happened to post publicly. For a look at AI-powered websites that offer more reliable utility, there are vetted alternatives worth exploring.
Here’s what’s actually changing:
Analysts describe AI Mode as part of a “flurry of releases” designed to make Facebook more “sticky and useful,” according to TechCrunch — while cautioning that answers sourced from group chatter raise serious reliability concerns.
The accuracy problem is harder to ignore than Meta would prefer. Asking Facebook AI for local restaurant picks or health advice means getting a summary of whatever strangers posted, not verified information. Remember Google’s AI Mode telling users to put glue on pizza, sourced from a Reddit joke? That same dynamic now operates at Facebook scale, with misinformation baked right into the synthesized answer before you even scroll down.
Meta’s AI training pipeline runs quietly in the background, with no meaningful off switch for most users.
Meta has been using public posts from users 18 and older to train its AI models since 2024. By late 2025, AI chat data reportedly began feeding ad personalization across all Meta apps, according to reporting from Proton. Privacy advocates note there is effectively “no real way to turn off Meta AI” — even filing opt-out requests or deleting chats doesn’t fully prevent indirect data processing, a pattern echoed by reports of apps secretly tracking users without meaningful consent. Group admins report AI features appearing enabled by default, requiring manual removal.
The line between “your conversation” and “Meta’s training data” has essentially disappeared on the world’s largest social platform. Regulatory scrutiny is building in GDPR jurisdictions, but the defaults are already set — and defaults are where real decisions get made. This fits a long pattern of tech scandals in which default settings quietly strip users of control before any backlash can form.
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