Latest
Is Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta AI getting too smart?
If you’ve ever wished your phone could just see what you’re dealing with instead of making you type it all out, Meta heard you. The company just launched its new AI model, Muse Spark, now powering the Meta AI assistant, and it’s rolling out across the Meta AI app, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, Messenger and even its AI glasses in the coming weeks.
It’s the first major release from Meta Superintelligence Labs, a division Mark Zuckerberg founded nine months ago with one stated goal: putting “personal superintelligence” in everyone’s hands.
That’s a big promise. So let’s look at what’s actually here right now.
Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report
REESE WITHERSPOON WARNS AI IS THREE TIMES MORE LIKELY TO REPLACE WOMEN
Muse Spark is Meta’s foundational AI model, the first in a deliberate scaling series where each version validates and builds on the last before Meta goes bigger. The team rebuilt its AI stack from the ground up over the past nine months, making this one of the fastest development cycles the company has ever run.
The model is described as small and fast by design, yet capable enough to reason through complex questions in science, math and health. Think of it as a strong foundation rather than the ceiling. Meta has already confirmed the next generation is in development.
Right now, Muse Spark powers the Meta AI assistant across the Meta AI app and meta.ai. That’s your entry point if you want to try it today.
The upgraded Meta AI now runs in two modes: Instant and Thinking. Instant handles quick questions. Thinking digs into more complex problems that need stronger reasoning. You switch between them depending on what you need.
META REPORTEDLY BUILDING AN AI VERSION OF MARK ZUCKERBERG TO INTERACT WITH COMPANY EMPLOYEES
What’s genuinely new is how it handles both at the same time. Meta AI can now launch multiple subagents in parallel. Planning a family trip to Florida? One agent drafts the itinerary, another compares Orlando to the Keys, and a third pulls up kid-friendly activities, all at the same time. You get a better, more complete answer in less time.
That’s a real shift. Most AI assistants work through tasks one at a time. Running them in parallel is closer to how a capable human research team actually operates, and honestly, it’s about time.
As Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a recent Facebook post, “We are building products that don’t just answer your questions but act as agents that do things for you.”
This is one of the most practical changes in Muse Spark. Meta built strong multimodal perception into the model, which means Meta AI can look at images rather than just read text you type.
Snap a photo of an airport snack shelf and ask which options have the most protein. Scan a product and ask how it stacks up against alternatives. The AI works with what you’re seeing, which cuts out the whole “let me describe what’s in front of me” step that makes most AI assistants feel clunky in real life.
When Muse Spark rolls out to Meta’s AI glasses, this capability becomes especially interesting. The assistant will be able to see and understand your environment in real time, without you having to hold up a phone at all.
Health is one of the top reasons people turn to AI, and Meta addressed that directly. Meta AI can now handle health questions with more detailed responses, including questions that involve images and charts.
The company worked with a team of physicians to develop the model’s ability to respond to common health questions and concerns. That doesn’t replace your doctor. But it does mean you can show Meta AI a chart from your lab results or a diagram from a health website and get a meaningful, informed response rather than a wall of disclaimers.
That’s actually useful. Most people have been there, squinting at a chart from their physician’s portal with zero context. Having something that can look at it with you changes the experience.
Starting today in the U.S., the Meta AI app has a dedicated Shopping mode. It helps users figure out what to wear, style a room or find a gift for someone specific.
Rather than pulling from a generic product database, Shopping mode surfaces ideas from creators and communities already active on Facebook, Instagram and Threads. The result feels more like getting a recommendation from someone with a good eye than navigating a department store website.
That’s a meaningfully different approach, and it’s one Meta is uniquely positioned to pull off given the content ecosystem it already owns.
If you use Facebook, Instagram or WhatsApp regularly, Meta AI powered by Muse Spark is already on its way to you. You will not need to download anything new or hunt for it. It will show up inside the apps you already use. So what actually changes day to day?
First, you spend less time explaining things. If you have ever tried to describe a label, a chart or something confusing in front of you, this will feel like a big upgrade. Just snap a photo, ask your question and move on. No long explanations. No back and forth.
Next, planning gets easier. Trips, events or even simple decisions often mean jumping between tabs and comparing options. Meta AI now handles multiple parts of that process at once. You get a clearer answer faster, without doing five separate searches.
Shopping also starts to feel different. Right now, the new shopping mode is only available in the U.S. But it pulls ideas from real posts, creators and communities across Meta’s apps. That gives you suggestions that feel more like recommendations from people, not just search results.
And then there is what comes next. If Meta’s AI glasses have felt easy to ignore so far, that may change. When the AI can see what you see in real time, without you pulling out your phone, it starts to feel less like a feature and more like something built into your day. That is where this begins to stand out.
Take my quiz: How safe is your online security?
Think your devices and data are truly protected? Take this quick quiz to see where your digital habits stand. From passwords to Wi-Fi settings, you’ll get a personalized breakdown of what you’re doing right and what needs improvement. Take my Quiz here: Cyberguy.com.
Meta is moving quickly, and Muse Spark is the first real sign that Meta Superintelligence Labs is building something that could stick. What stands out is how practical this feels. The ability to understand images, handle multiple tasks at once and respond to health questions are not features designed to just dazzle in a demo. They are built for the messy, visual, fast-moving reality of everyday life. This is not the final version. Meta already has the next generation in the works. API access is coming to select partners, and open-source models are part of the plan. Think of this as the starting point. And based on how fast Meta is moving, it may not stay “early” for long.
If an AI starts planning your trips, guiding your choices and handling tasks for you, where do you draw the line? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.
Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report
Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Latest
Carrie Ann Inaba shares her struggle to manage hidden, invisible illness: ‘It’s real’
Longtime “Dancing with the Stars” judge Carrie Ann Inaba is spreading awareness about a condition she’s been living with for decades.
The dancer and TV personality has recently been transparent about her journey with Sjogren’s disease – an autoimmune condition that can start with seemingly small symptoms but has the potential to become debilitating.
Inaba, 58, was rushed to the hospital last week after her condition triggered a medical emergency mid-flight while traveling to New York City.
‘DWTS’ JUDGE CARRIE ANN INABA RUSHED TO HOSPITAL AFTER MID-FLIGHT MEDICAL EMERGENCY
In an Instagram post featuring a video of Inaba being transported in an ambulance, she described how she “suddenly felt quite ill.”
“And while it seemed like food poisoning, I also suddenly broke out into a cold sweat, got dizzy and my arms went numb,” she wrote.
“Like many people who live with autoimmune disease, I travel with a health tool kit and am prepared for the worst, but this scared me.”
SELENA GOMEZ’S HEALTH BATTLE TAKES PAINFUL TURN AS STAR REVEALS LUPUS COMPLICATION
In an interview with Fox News Digital, Inaba revealed that she’s been silently struggling with the disease for years, since first developing eye problems when she was younger.
“My eyes were really, really dry and I kept having injuries to my corneas,” she said.
After consulting her ophthalmologist, who brushed off her symptoms, Inaba met with a rheumatologist who directed her to a Sjogren’s specialist.
Following extensive bloodwork and a dry-eye test, Inaba was diagnosed with Sjogren’s disease in 2013 – more than 10 years after she first experienced symptoms.
Sjogren’s is a chronic, systemic autoimmune disease that can affect different parts of the body. If left untreated, the condition can worsen over time, in some cases causing damage to the lungs, kidneys and other organs, according to medical experts.
An estimated four million people in the U.S. are living with Sjogren’s, 90% of whom are women.
In a survey of more than 3,500 adults living with the disease, 48 different symptoms were reported over the course of a year, per data from Sjout for Sjogren’s.
Sjogren’s can show up differently for everyone, making it difficult to diagnose.
In Inaba’s case, after the initial dry-eye symptoms, she began suffering from “a lot of pain” in her neck and shoulders. As a dancer, this was difficult to differentiate from the normal aches and pains, she shared. Extreme fatigue was another symptom she experienced.
“I had no energy to move forward with things, which is unlike me,” she said. “I’ve always been a go-getter … I was physically active my whole life. And during this chapter, when I was starting to figure out something was wrong, there were all these symptoms, and I didn’t understand how they were related.”
FEELING EXTRA TIRED? THIS VIRUS COULD BE THE CULPRIT, STUDY SUGGESTS
Other symptoms can include dry mouth, brain fog, anxiety, swollen glands and lymph nodes, skin rashes, fevers and night sweats. People may also notice numbness, tingling or burning in the hands or feet. Internal organ complications can also occur.
Inaba said she relies on a variety of practices to manage her symptoms, including keeping her eyes and environment moist.
“I always have a lot of drinks. I’m always spraying things in the air to get moisture in the air. I have a humidifier I sleep with,” she told Fox News Digital.
“I also do lots of meditation and reiki and body work to make sure I don’t get too flared up, because pain is always with me. I live with pain 24/7.”
Inaba said she’s learned how to listen to her body to tap into what it needs, especially taking time to rest surrounding big events.
“I know that more than likely, I might be sick and I might have a few down days afterwards, and it’s worth the risk,” she said. “If I don’t have to be in a crowd, I won’t, because I want to take care of my health and prioritize myself.”
For others who are living with Sjogren’s or experiencing symptoms, Inaba’s advice is to keep “careful track” of the warning signs, to recognize when something doesn’t feel right and to advocate for proper care.
This is the message behind the Sjout for Sjogren’s campaign, an awareness movement that Inaba hopes will help spread more knowledge about the disease and reduce stigma.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES
“We want people to respect that it is a complicated systemic autoimmune disease that needs care,” she said. “There is no FDA-approved treatment at this time, so it’s about managing symptoms.”
“It’s important to also have a community – and part of this campaign is about building a community.”
The most important thing Inaba wants people to know about Sjogren’s is that “it’s real.”
“It’s an invisible illness,” she said. “I know when I’m out there doing whatever show I’m doing, you don’t think I’m sick, but I pay a price for doing that.”
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER
“It’s sometimes a lonely and isolating disease – and so I want people to know they can reach out … I want people to feel confident enough to shout about what they’re going through.”
TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ
She added, “Don’t let people tell you it’s not real. And have patience for the friends who are trying to understand, but can’t quite. Because, most likely, you don’t believe it unless you’re actually experiencing it.”
Fox News Digital’s Stephanie Giang-Paunon contributed to this report.
Latest
The legacy of ‘Eagle Claw’: How failure helped build America’s elite special forces
Forty-six years ago this month, America learned a brutal lesson in the Iranian desert.
In April 1980, Operation Eagle Claw, a Delta Force mission to rescue American hostages in Tehran, ended in disaster. Mechanical failures, a sandstorm, and a catastrophic collision killed eight U.S. service members. The mission failed. The world watched. Our enemies took note.
But what they failed to understand then, and what they are being reminded of now, is this:
America learns. America adapts. And America returns more lethal.
TRUMP TO HONOR SPECIAL FORCES BEHIND MADURO CAPTURE AT FORT BRAGG AS GLOBAL TENSIONS ESCALATE
The rescue of two U.S. airmen deep inside hostile territory was not just an extraordinary success. It was the direct legacy of that failure 46 years ago. What the world just witnessed was the full expression of a Special Operations playbook forged in the wreckage of Eagle Claw.
Failure Forged the Force the World Fears Today
Operation Eagle Claw exposed glaring weaknesses: fractured command, poor inter-service coordination, and no unified special operations capability. America did not retreat. America rebuilt.
That failure became a watershed moment in Special Operations history, helping give birth to USSOCOM and JSOC, the modern U.S. Special Operations enterprise: disciplined, integrated, and built for the world’s hardest missions. Units under Joint Special Operations Command now train for the exact scenario we saw unfold this week: a high-risk recovery deep inside denied territory, executed with precision under extreme pressure.
This latest mission did not begin when the aircraft went down. It began long before, through contingency plans, rehearsals, and layered decision-making built for speed. When the call came, execution was not improvised. It was immediate.
Decision cycles were not measured in hours. They were measured in minutes.
MORNING GLORY: PRESIDENT TRUMP’S BIG SPEECH ON IRAN — WHAT WILL IT DO?
“No One Left Behind” Is Not a Slogan. It Is a Covenant.
Every service member downrange understands one thing: if you go down, America is coming. No matter the cost. Whatever it takes.
That belief is not motivational language. It is operational truth. It drives risk tolerance. It compresses timelines. And it reinforces trust across the force in ways civilians rarely see or fully understand.
In this case, one airman landed roughly 40 miles from the crash site and survived over 36 hours evading capture, injured, alone, and moving. He did not “get lucky.” His training took over.
That is Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SEREE) training in action: controlling movement, minimizing signature, mastering fear, and maintaining discipline until recovery forces arrive.
Meanwhile, a massive recovery package surged into motion: more than 150 aircraft, including bombers, fighters, refueling tankers, and rescue platforms. This is what global reach looks like. This is what capability looks like. This is what commitment looks like.
RESCUE EXPERT SAYS MOST DANGEROUS MOMENT COMES AFTER ‘JACKPOT’ CALL IN RECOVERY BEHIND ENEMY LINES
The Brotherhood Civilians Will Never Fully Understand
There is something in these missions that is difficult to explain outside the community.
A switch flips.
Everything else disappears – fear, fatigue, even self-preservation. What remains is singular focus: finish the mission. Find him, secure him, and bring him home. Whatever it takes.
I have had the luxury of a front seat to some of our most elite warrior. The tales of teammates throw themselves on top of hostages in the middle of a firefight, willing to absorbing bullets and shrapnel meant for someone else. That is not normal human behavior. That is the product of training, trust, and an unbreakable brotherhood forged over years.
These are “no-fail” missions. Not because failure is impossible, but because it is intolerable.
We Do Not Leave Our People. And We Do Not Forget Our Fallen.
There is another legacy of Operation Eagle Claw that matters just as much.
From that tragedy came the Special Operations Warrior Foundation, whose mission is simple and sacred: ensure the children of fallen special operations personnel receive a full education.
That is part of America’s battlefield promise.
We bring our people home. And if they do not come home, we take care of their families.
That promise is not a bumper sticker. It is not a talking point. It is a covenant, paid for in blood and honored in action.
A BRAVE MARINE COLONEL TOOK ON THE PENTAGON — AND PAID THE PRICE FOR IT
From 1980 to Today: Vindication in the Same Region
There is profound historical symmetry in what just happened.
Forty-six years ago, in that same region, we fell short.
Now, we executed with precision, recovering our people, striking enemy targets, and demonstrating a level of coordination and lethality our adversaries cannot match.
This is not just success.
This is vindication.
It sends a clear message to Iran, China, Russia, and every adversary watching: distance is not protection. Terrain is not protection. Time is not protection.
If you harm Americans, we can find you. And we will act.
American Exceptionalism, Proven, Not Claimed
HIGH-RISK EFFORT TO SAVE ‘DUDE 44’ CREW IS MOST INCREDIBLE COMBAT RESCUE IN US HISTORY
In a world that often questions American strength, this mission answered it. Not with rhetoric, but with results.
What you saw in this rescue was not luck. It was not improvisation. It was the culmination of decades of hard lessons from both triumph and tragedy, relentless training, and an unshakable commitment to one principle: leave no man behind.
That principle was tested in 1980, and it failed. But from that failure, we built something extraordinary, a force worthy of those still serving, those we have lost, and the warriors who built this legacy.
And now, the world has seen exactly what that looks like.
Kirk Offel is a Navy nuclear attack submarine veteran and the CEO of Overwatch Mission Critical, a Texas-based Service-Disabled Veteran Owned data center company that trains and hires future leaders for high-skill jobs in the data center industry. He is a Top 10 ranked global voice on data centers.
Latest
US economic chokehold on Iran reaches peak leverage and more top headlines
1. US economic chokehold on Iran reaches peak leverage
2. Trump pressed on whether he’d use a nuclear weapon on Iran
3. Defense Department scientist’s death raises questions
EYES IN THE SKY — Football field-sized object tracked on sonar at 200 mph, Rep Burchett says. Continue reading …
FLEEING THE SCENE — Patriots coach breaks silence on affair scandal after kissing photos leak. Continue reading …
DAY IN COURT — School teacher known as ‘Mr Wonderful’ accused of heinous crimes against students. Continue reading …
BEYOND FOOTBALL — Fernando Mendoza’s emotional hug with mom steals NFL Draft spotlight. Continue reading …
HEIR APPARENT — Rams shake up NFL Draft first round with surprise pick of Alabama QB. Continue reading …
—
MAPS AND MAYHEM — Virginia’s redistricting war lays bare state’s sharp partisan turn as legal fight looms. Continue reading …
‘LAME DUCK’ — Jeffries tears into DeSantis as ‘charismatically challenged’ over redistricting gambit. Continue reading …
NONPROFIT EXPOSED — GOP lawmakers target SPLC-linked federal judge with lifetime appointment on bench. Continue reading …
LINGERING QUESTIONS — Epstein fallout grows as DOJ watchdog digs deeper into handling of the case. Continue reading …
FLASHBACK — Five of the most politically-charged moments at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. Continue reading …
BITTER FEUD — Patel fiercely rejects NY Times’ claim that FBI ‘investigated’ one of its reporters. Continue reading …
BROKEN PROMISES — Podcasters who helped Trump win now warn his Iran war will hand power back to Dems. Continue reading …
ROUGH ENDORSEMENT — CNBC host grills Elizabeth Warren on rallying with controversial Senate hopeful. Continue reading …
DAVID MAIMON — Iran and its allies are committing epic financial fraud in America. I watch it happen every day. Continue reading …
DAVID BIER — Trump’s immigration crackdown may be hitting the legal workers we need. Continue reading …
—
ZERO TOLERANCE — Popular destination cracks down hard on tourists as new limits threaten summer getaways. Continue reading …
SECRET CRACKED — NOAA identifies bizarre ‘golden orb’ found 2 miles deep on sea floor near Alaska. Continue reading …
DIGITAL’S NEWS QUIZ — What landed this Democrat in hot water? How did Jelly Roll lose his way? Take the quiz here …
ROYAL SNUB — King Charles won’t meet Prince Harry during monarch’s US state visit. Continue reading …
PEAK VIEWING — Remarkable bird’s-eye view shown of tulips in bloom at Illinois farm. See video …
SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM — Iran’s economy is in a freefall. See video …
BENNY JOHNSON — SPLC’s corporate-scale fraud must be shut down. See video …
Tune in as federal momentum builds behind psychedelic research, spotlighting a controversial compound’s potential role in treating veteran trauma. Check it out …
What’s it looking like in your neighborhood? Continue reading…
Fox News Entertainment (FOX411)
Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing Monday.
-
Latest1 week agoVance Leaves Meeting, Looks Straight Into Camera, Announces Stunning Arrest
-
News1 week agoAdam Schiff Facing 30 Years In Prison After Bank Records Leak
-
News2 weeks agoAll Hell Breaks Loose On Fox When Jesse Watters Asks Fetterman One Question
-
News1 week agoNBC Stops LIVE Broadcast — Breaks Big Trump News
-
Latest1 week agoSupreme Curt Sides With Trump — He Can Remove The All
-
News1 week agoSwalwell Facing Jail Time After Sickening New Video Leaks
-
Latest2 weeks agoMelania Gets Huge Surprise 24 Hours After Making Epstein Announcement
-
Latest1 week agoUT Judge Drops Bombshell In Charlie Kirk Killer Case
