
To make your Newsfeed better, Facebook is working on artificial intelligence that can understand whatâs going on in your photos.
Speaking at Web Summit, Facebookâs CTO, Mike Schroepfer, detailed a new system the company has been developing to understand whatâs happening in photos and translate that into natural language elements.

One demonstration showed a photo in Newsfeed of a man skateboarding, which the computer deconstructed and described in words to understand what was happening.
It broke it down into what it saw âa skateboard, a man, a trick, his skateboardâ and what may have been happening âdoing, riding, is doingâ and constructed a description of what was occurring.
Schroepfer said that âwhen the machine understands attributes of an imageâ it is âeasy to understand the applications to Facebook.â
The technology would allow the company to âdo the best job of showing you what you want in your feed by understanding photos based on the pixels.â
It doesnât appear to be in use on the service right now, but rather as part of a system thatâs being researched for future use at the company.

Another demonstration showed a prototype application using the same technology but targeted at visually impaired users. A photo is given to the app, and you can ask questions using speech in which the AI will describe in words.
Facebook said today that itâs planning to further its AI teamâs research in a new paper at NIPS, an artificial intelligence conference next month â itâs reportedly 30 percent faster than industry standards right now.
One day your Newsfeed might be able to figure out whatâs in photos shared by friends and show them to you based on what you actually like to see.
Itâs a slightly creepy way to imagine a future iteration of the service, but Facebook is pursuing a world where it only displays to you things youâre interested in. That future means Facebook knows even more about you based on whatâs in your images, but it felt kind of inevitable.
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