Is Meta secretly scanning your phone’s camera roll? Check this setting to find out ASAP

October 20, 2025

These steps don’t work for me. Why?

The steps above, which I’ve verified using the Facebook app for iPhone, may vary on Android devices.

Samsung users, for instance, must do the following: Open Facebook > Go to Profile/Menu > Tap the gear icon in the upper right > Scroll down to “Camera roll sharing suggestions” and select it > You’ll see the two camera roll sharing toggles.

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Definitely go to Facebook’s support hub if you need more help. You basically have to find the Settings and privacy menu in the Facebook mobile app, and from there, you can find “Camera roll sharing suggestions” and disable the options.

Why is Facebook cloud-processing my device’s camera roll?

Meta is uploading and analyzing your camera roll photos and videos, even ones you haven’t posted, in its cloud in order to generate AI-powered suggestions like collages, monthly recaps, themed albums, or AI-restyled versions of your images.

Where is this feature available?

Meta says the feature has rolled out in the US and Canada and remains opt-in. It is not available in Illinois or Texas due to those states’ privacy laws.

Will Meta train its AI on my camera roll photos?

Meta says the camera roll media uploaded by this feature to make suggestions won’t be used to improve AI at Meta unless you edit the suggestions with its AI tools or publish those suggestions to Facebook.

Did Facebook ask for my consent before turning this on?

Meta is showing a pop-up asking users if they want to enable cloud processing, but some users claim they haven’t seen it. Instead, they found the toggles in their settings switched on without their knowledge, raising questions about whether clear consent was given.

Is Meta scanning your camera roll? How to check and turn it off - right now
Elyse Betters Picaro / ZDNET

I’ve asked several people to check whether camera roll sharing suggestions were enabled in their Facebook app. Besides myself and ZDNET’s editorial director, my partner, in-laws, and many friends all found the options turned on without their knowledge. Many users have also reported on social media and in forum threads, like this one on Y Combinator, that the settings were enabled for them.

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Some of these people recalled seeing a consent pop-up from Facebook, while others did not. But nearly everyone said they did not realize they were allowing access to their camera roll data. They also said they would not have allowed it if they had known.

Can I remove my photos once they’ve been uploaded?

ZDNET’s sister site, CNET, reports that Meta pulls from your newer pictures (roughly the last 30 days) and if you disable the feature, your uploaded photos will be deleted after 30 days. The only way to confirm is by downloading your Facebook account data.

Why is this a potential privacy issue?

It expands Meta’s reach beyond the content you’ve chosen to upload and share online — into your private, unposted photos and videos. For many, that’s a major red flag and a line they’re not comfortable crossing, understandably so.

Even if Meta is asking for consent to access your camera roll in order to analyze your phone’s photos and provide AI-powered suggestions, the company could have done a better job of being clear and explicit about what it’s trying to do.

How many users, like me, simply dismissed the consent pop-up without fully realizing what they’d just agreed to?

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Editor’s note: This article was last updated on Oct. 20, 2025, to include the official rollout of Facebook’s opt-in camera roll feature in the US and Canada and to clarify Meta’s statement about when camera roll media may be used to improve AI. It was previously updated on Sept. 2, to clarify steps for Android users, and on Aug. 24 to confirm that Meta’s camera roll sharing suggestions are not turned on by default. Still, some users say they never knowingly agreed and are finding the features enabled in their settings.

 

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