What you need to know
- Reports regarding Meta’s AI outlook in 2026 suggest there are plans to debut an agentic AI bot on Instagram that can shop for the user.
- Supposedly, this bot could debut late in 2026, as it’s influenced by another AI agent: OpenClaw.
- Other reports say that Meta’s OpenClaw inspiration might extend to a set of “agentic tools” to be powered by its new LLM, Muse Spark.
Reports are surfacing late week, all involving Meta and its supposed AI plans moving forward for users on Instagram and more.
The Information alleges that Meta is looking to create an AI bot for Instagram that goes on shopping sprees for users (via Reuters). It was stated that there are internal plans to integrate this AI within the Instagram app with “agentic tools” for users. With that agentic backing, it seems like Meta wants the user in the proverbial driver’s seat for this AI bot, codenamed “Hatch.” Essentially, users would be able to tell the AI what they want (likely what they’re looking to purchase) before setting it free.
That is the main selling point behind agentic AI, after all, to be able to “analyze, think, and act.”
Allegedly, the company wants to debut this agentic AI shopping bot on Instagram late this year. The Information adds that Meta has supposedly taken inspiration from OpenClaw, too, an AI agent that’s been turning some heads. Similarly, the publication spotted a Financial Times report, which claims Meta’s OpenClaw inspiration runs much deeper than just an agentic AI shopping bot. Tapping its source, the Financial Times states this agentic assistant is currently being “trialled internally by a group of staff.”
It adds that Meta is working on a set of “agentic tools,” but details weren’t provided. All that was stated was that this AI agent would likely have to lean on Muse Spark AI.
Muse Spark is a relatively new addition to Meta’s ever-growing AI mindset. The company debuted its new LLM early in April, stating it wanted to take its AI into a “people first” era. It was already stated at the time that Muse Spark could leverage multiple agents to handle user tasks with speed and accuracy. What’s more, Muse Spark is multimodal, meaning you could ask it to do something fun, like create a minigame.
Android Central’s Take
There might come a time where Meta is trying to do a little too much. Agentic shopping bot aside, Meta is finding itself in quite the hot seat. Not only with how analysts view its future, but also employees internally. There’s still much in the dark about how its shopping bot will work on Instagram and how this Muse Spark-fueled agentic assistant will work. One thing is pretty clear based on these early rumors: Meta is certainly trying to put people in “control.”
Elsewhere, Meta highlighted its hopes for people to lean on Muse Spark for medical assistance. It tried to position it positively by mentioning its collaboration with over 1,000 physicians, who have offered up “curated training data for the AI.” Are we surprised to see reports about Meta looking to advance its AI yet again? Not at all; especially after what went down during its Q1 2026 earnings call.
Meta posted $56.31 billion in revenue, marking a 33% YoY (year-over-year) growth this past first quarter. However, when you look at its spending, Meta shot up by 35% ($33 billion) from January 1 to March 31, 2026. It was stated by a senior analyst at Investing.com, Jesse Cohen, that “Meta’s earnings beat was overshadowed by the Capex surprise. Investors are digesting the reality that Meta’s ambitious AI ambitions come with a hefty price tag that will pressure profitability in the near term.”


