Meta AI app floods users with AI-generated clickbait stories and fabricated content

Reviewed byNidhi Govil

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Meta's standalone AI app now features a For You section filled with AI-generated clickbait articles covering topics from royal tea etiquette to fake Rolex experiments. The stories lack sources, contain fabricated narratives, and include AI-generated images of public figures with obvious errors. Meta has not clarified whether it considers this content news or fiction, raising questions about content moderation as AI platforms become more social.

Meta AI Transforms Into AI-Generated Clickbait Factory

Meta AI has quietly shifted from a chatbot interface into something far more familiar yet deeply unsettling: a feed of AI-generated clickbait designed to mimic the very content that has plagued Facebook for years. The standalone AI app now features a For You section that serves users a stream of suggested article prompts which, when tapped, generate entire AI-generated stories complete with AI-generated images

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. What began as an experimental platform with a public "Discover" feed showing AI-generated images and conversations has evolved into Meta's AI feed delivering algorithmically tailored clickbait to individual users based on perceived interests

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The content ranges from aggressively stereotypical to completely fabricated. A London-based reporter received prompts about British culture including "A royal butler finally settled the milk first debate," "The psychology of joining a queue without knowing why," and "Inside the extreme sport of visiting every UK pub"

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. Another user's feed suggested luxury watch content like "My fake Rolex experiment" and "The brutal math behind the Rolex waitlist illusion"

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. The AI-generated content reads like filler, offering little substance beyond restating the premise repeatedly, with no sourcing whatsoever

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Low-Quality AI Content Raises Fabrication Concerns

Investigation into these AI-generated clickbait news feed articles reveals a troubling pattern of fabrication and misinformation. The royal butler tea story appears to trace back to a 2018 BBC Three comedy series, while the Rolex experiment story was a complete fabrication generated as a first-person narrative without a byline

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. Other stories relied on vague references to unnamed experts or fictional research. When users tapped the same cards multiple times, the generated stories stayed within rough bounds of the prompt but varied slightly, revealing the content's artificial nature

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Chat history exposed hidden prompts beginning with "You are a helpful conversational assistant. The user is responding to a proactive feed card that was shown to them," followed by internal instructions and metadata

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. This reveals the mechanical process behind what appears as personalized content recommendations. Users of Meta AI's social discovery feed have encountered strange AI-generated posts ranging from fabricated personal confessions to misleading health claims and bizarre fictional scenarios designed to attract reactions and shares

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AI-Generated Images of Public Figures Violate Standards

The AI-generated images accompanying these articles present another layer of concern. While many images were harmless renderings of cartoonish people and landscapes, others depicted public figures with glaring errors. An article titled "Who really pays for the royal family in 2026?" featured two Queen Elizabeth IIs despite her death several years prior

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. The image also included approximations of Princess Kate, Prince William, and King Charles with exaggerated features. Other images displayed typical AI tells like impossible hands and bodies at unnatural angles, with one GIF showing an older couple making arm movements no human body could replicate

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Source: The Verge

Source: The Verge

Despite Meta's stated commitment to transparency around AI chatbots and AI-generated spam, there was no obvious indication or label in the feed or articles that any material was AI-generated

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. The company has previously said it wants people to know when they see posts made with AI and automatically adds labels to some user-generated content when AI is detected, yet this feature appears exempt from such safeguards.

Content Moderation Challenges as Social Platforms Evolve

Meta declined to answer critical questions about the feature's purpose, whether the company considers the output news or fiction, what safeguards are in place, and whether images of real people and public figures comply with its own AI-content policies

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. Meta spokesperson Tracy Clayton offered only a brief statement: "We're testing a daily feed that proactively shares tips, content, and recommendations tailored to your interests. The goal is to suggest what's most relevant to you - such as fitness advice, meal plans, or other insi"

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The situation highlights a growing challenge facing AI companies: what happens when AI chatbots evolve from private assistants into social platforms where generated content is publicly shared and algorithmically surfaced

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. Meta has positioned AI as a social experience rather than just a productivity tool, encouraging users to publish prompts, generated images, and AI-assisted posts for others to browse

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. This approach may drive engagement-bait tactics, but it creates familiar content moderation problems that social media platforms have struggled with for years.

Critics warn this ecosystem incentivizes users to generate increasingly outrageous or emotionally manipulative AI content to gain attention, with some posts resembling classic Facebook clickbait tactics while others blur the line between satire, misinformation, and spam

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. If recommendation algorithms amplify the most engaging content regardless of quality or accuracy, platforms may unintentionally reward low-quality AI content creation in the same way social media has historically rewarded outrage

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. As Meta continues integrating AI across WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, and the standalone AI app, users and regulators may demand stronger controls around how AI-generated content is surfaced and labeled.

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