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

You can now choose the kind of content you see on Instagram Reels

A more personalized Reels experience through 'Your Algorithm'

Add as a preferred source on Google
instagram-your-algorithm
Instagram

Instagram is finally letting people take the wheel of their Reels feed, instead of leaving everything up to a mysterious algorithm. After testing the feature with select users last October, Instagram has now rolled out ‘Your Algorithm’ to all English-speaking users globally.

The announcement came from Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri, giving people a more direct way to shape the kind of videos they actually want to see. At its core, Your Algorithm lets users actively tune their Reels experience.

Recommended Videos

Inside the Reels tab, you can now add or remove topics based on what you enjoy watching. For a limited time, Instagram is also letting users pick their top three interests for 2026, which Mosseri described as a way to tell your algorithm what you want more of going forward.

How ‘Your Algorithm’ actually works

Your Algorithm works alongside Instagram’s existing recommendation systems, rather than replacing them entirely. The app will still look at things like what you watch, like, and skip, but now it also factors in the topics you explicitly choose. That makes it easier to control your feed without having to aggressively tap “Not Interested” on dozens of posts.

Instagram users can adjust these preferences at any time, not just during the early-year window. You can revisit the settings, remove topics that no longer appeal to you, or add new ones as your interests change. The feature is currently available to all English-language users, with a wider rollout expected later.

There are still clear limits to how much control Instagram is willing to hand over. According to Engadget, the feature does not let users dial back ads entirely. For example, trying to add “ads” as something to see less of simply returns an error saying no results were found.

Interestingly, broader categories like “sponsored content” can be added, and even “AI” shows up as an option, though that likely affects videos about AI rather than posts created with it.

Instagram has been steadily refining the way you interact with content, from letting you revisit the Reels you’ve already watched through a new watch history feature to expanding editing and customization tools that help creators shape their videos and feeds more precisely.

Now the latest update gives you a simpler way to tune your Instagram feed. Whether that leads to better Reels or just a different kind of scrolling remains to be seen, but at least now, the feed is a little more on your terms.

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