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Instagram Now Lets You Tune Its Algorithm, But There’s One Big Catch
The new controls promise users “agency” over their feed, but asking to see more from accounts you actually follow returns an error.
Instagram has expanded its algorithm personalization feature to the main feed, letting users specify which topics they want surfaced more or less often in recommendations.
Instagram chief Adam Mosseri framed the change as a matter of user control. “I believe it’s in our best interest as a business to empower people to shape Instagram into something that works for them, and that people should be able to have a meaningful amount of agency over the products they spend so much time in,” he wrote on Threads.
Though it turns out that agency has limits. The controls only accept interest-based topics, such as “rescue dogs” or “parenting humor”. Requesting “posts from people I follow” returns no results, which is obviously a sore point for creators whose posts rarely reach their own audiences. Mosseri conceded the tension: “Who you follow used to be a meaningful tool people had for shaping their own experience, and as recommendations took over the main feed that tool quietly stopped working”.
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Instagram credits large language models for making its algorithms legible enough to personalize, and says it is “actively working on supporting requests for people, different moods or vibes, content types, and more” – potentially leading to a fully “bespoke” version of the app.
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Deezer’s Free AI Detector Reveals What’s Hiding In Your Playlists
Nearly half of listeners switching to Deezer arrive with AI-generated tracks already in their playlists. A new free tool shows whether you’re one of them.
Most people have no idea how much of their music library was made by a machine. Deezer wants to change that – and not just for its own subscribers.
The streaming platform has launched a free online AI music detector that works across 20 of the most common streaming services, available in 27 languages. The process is deliberately simple: visit the detector page, connect your streaming account, let Deezer scan your playlists, then view and share the results.
The numbers suggest plenty of listeners will be surprised by what they find. According to Deezer, 43% of people joining the platform from other streaming services already have AI-generated music in their playlists. And according to a recent eight-country survey from Deezer and Ipsos, 80% of people agree AI music should be clearly labeled, while 73% want to see AI tracks tagged on streaming platforms.
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So far, Deezer has been alone in taking action on this issue. The company was the first in the world to detect and tag AI-generated music on its own platform, and has since made the in-house technology commercially available to others across the music ecosystem.
