Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Facebook’s new AI Creator Assistant wants to be your personal content strategist

Meta's Creator Assistant for Facebook can analyze your comments, suggest content, and improve your reach

Add as a preferred source on Google
facebook-Creator-Assistant
Meta

If you’re a Facebook creator who has ever stared at an analytics dashboard trying to figure out why one reel did three times better than another, Meta just built something for you. The company has launched Creator Assistant, a conversational AI tool built directly into the Facebook creator dashboard.

It is designed to go beyond the numbers and actually explain what is working in your content and why. Creator Assistant is rolling out now to creators in the US, Canada, and India, with more countries coming in the months ahead.

Your own AI brainstorming partner, right in your dashboard

Creator Assistant is not just another analytics tool. It connects patterns across your content format, timing, and audience behavior to give you clear, personalized answers. You can ask it questions like why a particular reel outperformed the rest, when you should post, or what people are saying in your comments.

Recommended Videos

The tool is conversational, so you can keep asking follow-up questions and dig as deep as you want. When you hit a creative block, it also doubles as a brainstorming partner, pulling from what is trending on Facebook to suggest ideas around trending audio, cultural moments, and top-performing content styles.

With every interaction, Creator Assistant learns your goals – whether that is audience growth, deeper engagement, or monetization, and adjusts its recommendations accordingly.

AI-translated Reels are reaching a massive global audience

Alongside Creator Assistant, Meta is also expanding its AI-powered Reels translation feature. This tool preserves your voice’s tone and sound while automatically translating it into another language.

An optional lip-sync feature makes the translation feel even more natural, aligning the dubbed audio with your lip movements. The feature currently supports nine languages and is adding Arabic, Bahasa Indonesian, French, Thai, and Vietnamese soon.

Meta is trying to embed AI into every corner of its platforms, but its track record has been shaky. Its AI support assistant was hacked almost immediately after launch, and Creator Assistant will need similar account access, so it definitely raises some concerns about how well Meta can keep your data secure.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Snapchat Planets Meaning: Order, Rankings, and How Friend Solar System Works
Snapchat Planets turns your best friends list into a solar system, and yes, your orbit says a lot
Snapchat Planets being shown on the Snapchat app on iPhone.

Snapchat+ includes several exclusive features, but few have generated as much curiosity as Snapchat Planets. Part of the app's Friend Solar System, it transforms your Best Friends list into a planetary ranking, assigning each of your top eight friends a planet based on how often you interact.

From Mercury, which represents your closest friend, to Neptune, which represents your eighth closest, the system offers a quick visual snapshot of your interactions. But what do the different planets actually mean, and how does Snapchat decide who gets which one?

Read more
Instagram lands on Samsung TVs, with episodic series and live TV coming to your screen soon
Instagram for TV adds new features for group watching.
instagram-samsung-tv

Meta just expanded Instagram for TV to Samsung Smart TVs across the US, rolling out a bunch of new features built for group viewing. With Samsung now on board, Instagram for TV has officially landed on the three biggest connected TV platforms in the country.

https://twitter.com/metanewsroom/status/2069062429821026732?s=46

Read more
TikTok’s AI slop problem is worse than you think — and kids are seeing the most of it
TikTok

TikTok has spent years perfecting the art of knowing exactly what you want to watch next. Open the app, scroll a few times, and suddenly it’s serving videos that feel uncannily tailored to your interests. But what happens before TikTok learns who you are? According to new research from video editing platform Kapwing, the answer is increasingly AI slop.

The study found that nearly 60% of the videos shown to a brand-new TikTok account were low-quality AI-generated content. That’s not a niche problem buried in obscure corners of the platform. It’s the first impression TikTok is making on new users before the algorithm even begins personalizing their feed. And if that sounds concerning, the findings around children’s content are even harder to ignore.

Read more