Meta Boosts Creator Protection on Facebook
Meta is making creator protection a much bigger part of its Facebook push. The company says it is rolling out stronger tools to help creators spot impersonators, flag suspicious accounts faster, and take action with less friction.
It is also tightening the rules on reposted content and placing more weight on original work.
The problem was already too big to ignore
Meta is putting numbers on the scale of the problem.
The company says it removed more than 20 million accounts impersonating large content creators in 2025, showing how widely fake creator profiles had spread across Facebook before this latest protection effort. It also says impersonation reports tied to large creators fell 33%, which it presents as evidence that the crackdown is producing results, not just promises.
It also targets the wider problem of copycats and impersonators crowding out authentic voices in Feed and Reels. Meta combines stronger creator protections with stricter treatment for unoriginal content and bigger rewards for the people who made it.
One dashboard, quicker action
The product update focuses on making reporting less scattered. Meta is testing enhancements to its content protection tool so creators can detect potential impersonation across its platforms and submit reports more easily from one place.
That tool already helps protect original Facebook Reels by automatically detecting matches and allowing creators to act when their content appears elsewhere across Meta’s apps. The new impersonation feature extends that system, and the company indicates it will soon reach more creators through the professional dashboard by using content protection.
Original work gets the advantage
Meta also draws a line around what counts as worth promoting on Facebook.
Content filmed or produced directly by a creator counts as original, while Reels that use outside material can still qualify when the creator adds something genuinely new, such as fresh information, analysis, or substantial storytelling improvements.
On the other hand, reaction clips, stitched-together videos, narrated reposts, and minor edits such as borders, captions, or speed changes are treated as unoriginal and are likely to be deprioritized in Feed and Reels.
Creators who transform material creatively can become eligible for recommendations and increased distribution, while accounts that keep posting low-value copies can see their content pushed down, their accounts marked non-recommendable, and their monetization stripped away.
Meta says views and watch time for original Reels on Facebook roughly doubled in the second half of 2025 compared with the same period in 2024, and that payout opportunities for original creators continue to grow as it expands distribution across Feed and Reels.
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