SAG-AFTRA Issues Guidelines to Protect Against Meta’s New AI Image Generation Tool
via Imago
Credits: Imago
SAG-AFTRA has instructed its members and every Instagram user to opt out of Meta's new AI image generation tool, Muse Image, without delay. The union rarely moves this fast, and the urgency alone says plenty about what is at stake. Hollywood has spent years bracing for exactly this kind of moment, watching technology inch closer to the line performers hold most sacred. That line now appears crossed quietly, without so much as a knock.
As Meta pushes its AI ambitions further into everyday scrolling, the union pulls no punches on what users should do next.
SAG-AFTRA urges Instagram users to opt out of Muse Image
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SAG-AFTRA is treating Muse Image as an immediate threat, calling on every Instagram user to shut off access before Meta's AI reaches further. Public accounts now let anyone use posted photos and reels as references for the tool without asking first. A stranger can simply tag a username inside a prompt and generate realistic scenes built from that content. No notification gets sent, and no separate consent gets requested beyond the default setting.
"SAG-AFTRA recommends that #SagAftraMembers (and all Instagram users) opt-out of Muse Image," read a post from the union's official X account.
The union then added, "Take action to protect your likeness."
Opting out means opening Instagram settings, heading to Sharing and reuse, then switching off permissions for Posts and Reels under AI features. Private accounts stay excluded automatically, and users under eighteen remain protected without changing anything. The toggle does not erase images already generated before opting out, and some accounts are still waiting for the setting to appear. Creative Artists Agency joined the pushback, too, demanding that Meta default to opt-in consent instead.
While Instagram users scramble to lock down their photos, SAG-AFTRA leadership faces a bigger fight already sealed in contract form.
SAG-AFTRA leaders defend four year contract amid AI concerns
Chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland and union president Sean Astin have defended the four-year deal SAG-AFTRA signed with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. Crabtree-Ireland called it the right agreement, pointing to stronger AI protections alongside merged pension and health plans. He explained the longer term reflected what members needed this round, not a shift in strategy. Both leaders framed the deal as proof that steady negotiation beats the disruption of the 2023 shutdown.
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Astin admitted residuals remain an area needing progress, noting performers still do not fully share in the long-term financial life of their work. Crabtree-Ireland agreed that future rounds depend entirely on conditions at the time, keeping four years from becoming a fixed pattern. Both expressed confidence that the new AI protections will hold steady. Between opt-out tools and freshly signed protections, actors are learning to guard their image on every front.
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What are your thoughts on SAG-AFTRA pushing back against Meta's AI tool while defending its new contract? Let us know in the comments.
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Edited By: Itti Mahajan
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