The Sacramento Bee

Ready for a chatbot version of your favorite Instagram influencer­s?

- BY SAPNA MAHESHWARI AND MIKE ISAAC NYT News Service

Being an influencer can be a lot of work. Instagram thinks artificial intelligen­ce can lend a big hand.

Instagram is pitching popular influencer­s on a program that relies on AI to interact with fans, the latest example of how Meta, Instagram’s parent company, is trying to expand the technology across its products.

The program, which is in its early stages of testing and is known as Creator AI, would allow influencer­s to chat with fans through direct messages on the social network and potentiall­y through Instagram comments in the future, according to five people briefed on the company’s plans. The program will essentiall­y be a chatbot that mimics the “voice” of the Instagram influencer to respond to fans, the people said.

Most of the messages would be sent automatica­lly and would at least initially disclose that they were AI-generated, according to two of the people.

The goal, according to the people, is to give creators with large followings the ability to better connect with fans while decreasing the amount of work required to personally respond to large numbers of messages and comments. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because they were asked to sign nondisclos­ure agreements as part of the program.

Eva Chen, Instagram’s director of fashion partnershi­ps, recently pitched creators on the effort, and the platform has also been briefing agencies on it, according to three of the people involved in the talks. It is unclear if the program will be widely released.

Creators can select the data Meta uses to copy the way they speak, including their previous Instagram posts, direct messages, comments, and audio from Reels and Instagram Stories, two of the people said. Influencer­s can also dictate specific responses to certain questions, one person said.

A spokespers­on for Meta declined to comment.

Meta has aggressive­ly pushed to incorporat­e artificial intelligen­ce into all corners of the company’s business, from improving its advertisin­g systems to building AI assistants into smart glasses and other hardware projects. Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s CEO, has said he believes AI will become an “increasing­ly important driver of opportunit­y” for people, businesses and the economy as a whole.

Zuckerberg has also envisioned a world in which people will have omnipresen­t AI assistants to help them carry out daily tasks and other forms of work. Meta has spent billions of dollars redesignin­g the company’s systems to improve its developmen­t of the technology, racing to compete with companies such as Google, Microsoft and OpenAI.

And Meta has been spending millions of dollars to court influencer­s to its social networks, including Instagram and Facebook, after years of neglecting to do so. Zuckerberg has said he wants to “build the best platform for millions of creators to make a living.”

Some influencer­s have recently received invitation­s to a May event in New York, where Meta said it planned to demonstrat­e some of the company’s new and experiment­al AI products, according to two of the people familiar with Meta’s plans.

The Creator AI program expands on Meta’s earlier efforts to incorporat­e a cast of AI avatars built using the likenesses of celebritie­s such as Kendall Jenner and MrBeast. In that program, Meta created entirely new characters named “Billie” or “Zach” on Instagram and Facebook – which were depicted with the faces of participat­ing celebritie­s – that could interact with fans.

Some creators have been hesitant about the notion of automating their interactio­ns with their followers, saying that it could put words in their mouth that they don’t agree with. Others have balked at the notion that a chatbot could replicate the substance of the interactio­ns they have with fans. Many influencer­s have found success by interactin­g with people who crave more authentic and direct connection­s with the online personalit­ies they follow.

Still, there is some precedent for the program. A number of creators already rely on outside agencies and tools used to help respond to messages they receive across their Instagram and Facebook accounts. One such company, School of Bots, sells an AI chatbot program to influencer­s who want to automate direct message discussion­s with their followers.

It does not yet appear that Meta’s first batch of AI-powered avatars has been a breakout hit. Although Billie, the character inspired by Jenner, has 193,000 followers on Instagram, the comments on a recent video from the account were largely bemused. “This is so stupid,” a commenter said, garnering more than 12,700 likes. “I wonder how Kyndall feels about this robot impersonat­ing her,” said another, misspellin­g the star’s name.

And still another: “why ya’ll wanna text a robot?”

 ?? LOREN ELLIOTT NYT ?? Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Meta, speaks in Menlo Park, Calif., on Sept. 27, 2023. Instagram is testing “Creator A.I.,” a program that offers its top influencer­s the ability to interact with their followers over direct messages using a chatbot.
LOREN ELLIOTT NYT Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Meta, speaks in Menlo Park, Calif., on Sept. 27, 2023. Instagram is testing “Creator A.I.,” a program that offers its top influencer­s the ability to interact with their followers over direct messages using a chatbot.

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