Meta just lobbed a grenade into the AI ring with its standalone app, aiming straight for ChatGPT’s crown. The kicker? It taps users’ Instagram and Facebook habits for personalized chats and content, like a psychic that watched your Stories. There’s full-duplex speech—talk over the AI, if you dare—and Ray-Ban smart glasses just got a major AI upgrade. Sure, privacy watchdogs are already watching like hawks. Want to know how this turf war shakes up the AI scene? Stick around.
Meta has officially crashed the AI party—and no, it didn’t just bring chips and dip. At LlamaCon 2025, Meta dropped its new standalone AI app, marching right into ChatGPT‘s territory with a dedicated app instead of the usual “let’s bolt it on to Instagram” approach.
U.S. and Canadian users are the first to get the invite, while the rest of the world can watch the fireworks from afar. Even Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses get a makeover, with their companion app now rebadged as Meta AI. Subtle? Not really. As part of the launch, Meta is integrating Meta AI across multiple platforms, ensuring accessibility whether you’re on your phone, desktop, or wearing your smart glasses.
So what’s actually on the menu? Personalization, and tons of it. Meta’s not shy about using your Facebook and Instagram likes, comments, and probably that one embarrassing group you joined in 2013. Users can toss in extra preferences (think: “no cilantro ever”), and in return, the AI spits out answers tailored to your digital persona. The app’s Discover feed allows users to share creative prompts and browse how others are using Meta AI, bringing a social twist to the AI experience.
Don’t worry, you have to sign off before your conversations hit the public Discover feed. But if you’re the oversharing type, there’s plenty of opportunity for your AI-generated haikus to go viral.
Now, for the tech flex: Meta’s full-duplex speech feature lets you and the AI talk at the same time—yep, no more awkward “your turn, my turn” pauses. The voice interface is designed to feel more like real conversation, less like customer service hell. This mirrors the growing trend of AI in business where chatbots provide consistent customer service without human limitations.
For Ray-Ban Meta device owners, photo and video import is a snap. And if you want the AI to “describe you in 3 emojis,” well, that’s a thing now.
But wait—here’s the catch. Meta’s ad-driven model means all this personalization is fueled by data, data, and more data. Sure, they’re waving the “explicit consent” flag, and there’s no auto-sharing of your deep dark secrets, but let’s not pretend privacy watchdogs are going to be thrilled.
Bottom line? Meta’s swinging for the fences, blending AI with social media vibes and a hint of FOMO. Whether it’s the future or just another data goldmine, one thing’s clear: the ChatGPT vs. Meta AI showdown is officially on. Pass the popcorn.