Instagram AI Photos: What Parents Need to Know About Muse
If you’ve read this blog for a while, you’ll know I keep coming back to the same warning: AI tools that let strangers manipulate someone’s photo without asking are not a future problem, they are already here. Grok’s “put her in a bikini” trend. Nudifying apps that strip clothing from an image in seconds. This week, Meta gave us a new version of the same problem, and this time it is built straight into Instagram.
On 7 July 2026, Meta launched Muse Image, a new AI picture generator rolling out across the Meta AI app, Instagram and WhatsApp. TechCrunch confirmed that buried inside the launch is a reference feature that lets anyone @-mention a public Instagram account inside an AI prompt.1 Meta AI then pulls that account’s public photos and uses them to generate a brand-new image of a real person, without asking first and in most cases without that person ever finding out.
What Is Meta’s Muse Image and How Does the Instagram Reference Feature Work?
Muse Image is Meta’s answer to tools like ChatGPT’s image generator and Google’s Nano Banana. It can create pictures from a written prompt, edit existing photos and now, tag a real Instagram account as a visual reference. Type a username into the prompt and, if that account is public, Meta AI treats their posted photos as raw material. WIRED first reported that this setting is switched on by default for public accounts and that Meta’s own help pages state you will not be notified when someone uses your content this way.23
Why Muse Image Should Worry Parents of Instagram Users
I want to break this down the way I would for a parent sitting across the kitchen table from me, because there are four separate problems stacked on top of each other here, not one.
It’s opt-out, not opt-in. Nobody asked whether public Instagram accounts wanted to be used this way. The setting arrived switched on, and you have to go looking for it to turn it off.
You won’t be told if it happens. Meta has confirmed there is no notification when someone generates an AI image using your public photos as a reference. Your child could have an AI image made of them right now, and neither of you would know unless it turned up somewhere.
Turning it off doesn’t undo what’s already made. Digital Trends confirmed that opting out only stops future use of your content.[2] Anything already generated stays exactly where it is. Going private has the same limitation.
Age-faking punches a hole in Instagram’s teen protections. Instagram’s teen accounts are meant to be private by default, which, in theory, keeps under-18s out of this entirely. But Ofcom’s own research found that more than half of 8-to 12-year-olds using Instagram admitted entering a false birth date to get around the age requirement, and around three in ten 13-to 17-year-olds with a profile said they had signed up as older than they actually are.4 An unknown number of children are sitting on adult public accounts right now, with none of the teen protections applied, at the exact moment this feature has gone live.
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How to Turn Off Instagram AI Photo Reuse (Muse Image Opt-Out)
This is worth doing tonight, not this weekend. Open Instagram, tap your avatar in the bottom right, tap the three lines in the top-right corner, go to Settings and Activity, then Sharing and reuse. Look for the section called “Allow people to use your content on Instagram and with AI features on Meta” and turn off both Posts and Reels. Do this on your own account and on your child’s, if they have one. Remember, this stops future use. It will not remove anything already generated.
For Parents: What to Do About Instagram AI Photos Today
Check the Sharing and reuse setting on your account and your child’s tonight, not this weekend.
If your child’s account is public, ask why and consider switching it to private together.
Talk to your child about what this feature does. Not to frighten them, but to inform them. Ask if they’ve heard of it already; teenagers often have.
If you ever come across an AI image made of your child without consent, report it to the platform immediately and keep a screenshot as evidence before you do anything else.
For Teachers and DSLs: Briefing Guidance on Muse Image
Add Muse Image and the Instagram reference feature to your next safeguarding briefing. Most staff will not have heard of it yet.
Language to listen for: pupils mentioning being “@-mentioned” in an AI image, or joking about AI pictures made of classmates. Treat it the same way you would treat any other image-based concern.
This sits within your existing online safety and image-based abuse policy. It does not need a new policy; it needs staff awareness that the tool now exists.
If a pupil discloses that an AI image has been made of them without consent, follow your existing image-based harm and safeguarding referral pathway.
I don’t write this to frighten you. I write it because most of what I saw in eight years of digital forensics did not have to happen. A five-minute check of a settings menu tonight is a small thing. It is also, right now, the only control you actually have.
As always, thank you for your support. Please share this across your social media, and if you do have any comments, questions, or concerns, then feel free to reach out to me via the Social page, as I am always happy to spend some time helping to protect children online.
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TechCrunch, “Meta just launched a new AI generator, Muse Image, and users are already pushing back over use of their photos”, techcrunch.com, 7 July 2026. Accessed 8 July 2026. This is the earliest primary tech reporting confirming Meta’s own description of the @-mention reference tool.
Digital Trends, “Meta’s new AI can generate images of you from your Instagram, and you’re opted in”, digitaltrends.com, 7 July 2026. Accessed 8 July 2026. Opt-out steps reflect Meta’s settings menu as reported at time of writing; menus can change without notice, so check your own app against these steps.
WIRED, “Meta Now Lets Anyone Use Your Instagram Photos in AI Images Unless You Opt Out”, wired.com, 7 July 2026. Accessed 8 July 2026. This is the original investigative report; some detail here is drawn from other outlets’ reporting of WIRED’s findings, as noted.
Ofcom, Children’s Online User Ages research (chart pack), ofcom.org.uk. Accessed 8 July 2026. Figures relate to a specific Ofcom survey wave rather than this week’s data, and are used here as the clearest available evidence of how often platform age-gating is bypassed, not as a live count.






