Google Photos seems to be preparing a neat little trick that could make your group chats much noisier. Code buried in a recent app update for the iOS version of WhatsApp (spotted by WABetaInfo) refers specifically to an AI-powered capability named “Me Meme,” which appears to be intended to paste your face over well-known meme templates and then spit out a shareable image all within seconds.
So, why can’t Photorealism do all that already? It seems it has to do with how Google Photos is now handling backing up and syncing. App researchers at XDA-Developers investigated the UI text strings in version 7.51.0 of Google Photos and found onboarding text as well as language about how the tool functions.

You choose a meme template, you select a reference photo — ideally, it’s your face in a clear selfie — and you allow the model to handle the compositing. One onboarding graphic even makes a nod to the “This is fine” meme, suggesting the sort of formats Google may offer at launch. There’s a caveat: your reference picture must be uploaded to Google Photos, hinting at server-side processing.
How the Me Meme engine probably works in Photos
Technically, this is an old trench coat thrown over a computer-vision problem for the internet age. The system would have to discover and segment your face; figure out its pose, expression, and any occlusion (such as facial hair) in the scene; relight it so that it can fit seamlessly within the target template; and color match it with the other faces in the composite so that your final creation doesn’t look pasted on. Google does parts of this already across Photos and Pixel features — face selection in Best Take and relighting in Portrait Light, for instance — so Me Meme is a natural next step that uses generative AI to blend styles and textures.
The need for a backup photo implies cloud inference, with the potential runtime of larger models. That’s also why the instructions are to take a clear selfie: the better the inputs, the more signal there is for the model to preserve features such as skin texture and jawline contours when it maps your face onto the template.

Templates, flexibility, and one early clue
Aside from that “This is fine” tease, it’s not clear which memes will be on offer or if you can import your own templates. Control over titling, font styles, and framing will count for much; the distinction between a so-so gag and a screenshotable banger can often be determined by typography and crop. And app sleuths have found signs of work on an AI meme generator within Gboard, indicating Google is considering meme creation at more than one touchpoint — from your keyboard to your photo library.
If it lands as expected, Me Meme will land in an expanding universe of face-swapping or template-driven creation tools. Snapchat Cameos helped popularize snappy face inserts in short loops; TikTok and CapCut make template remixes common, while design suites like Adobe Express offer meme builders specifically with caption control. Google’s big differentiator is tight integration with your camera roll, face clustering, and sharing pipelines you’re already using.
Why it matters for Google Photos and everyday use
Google Photos has been transitioning from a pure archive to a creative center. Following Magic Eraser, Best Take, and Magic Editor, a meme tool pushes deeper into day-to-day low-stakes creativity — the kind of habit-forming behavior consumer apps cherish. And there’s a vast canvas to go after: by the company’s own accounts, Photos contains trillions of images, with tens of billions more added each week. Just a fraction of people using Me Meme might unleash a torrent of content across messaging apps or social platforms.
There’s also a practical appeal. The friction of leaving your camera roll, downloading a template, juggling editors, and reuploading kills a lot of snappy ideas. A native flow inside Photos has reduced that to a few taps — pick template, choose photo of self, adjust the caption to perfection, and hit share — and such convenience is all too often the deciding factor in which tools win.
Safety, privacy, and the business angle explained
Anything that messes with faces has familiar questions. Take Google Photos, which already has opt-in face grouping and privacy settings and doesn’t appear to be grabbing faces automatically, but rather asking the user to choose a reference image. Still, anticipate guidelines that will try to deter any impersonation or harassment while keeping the templates in the land of recognizable internet culture and away from political or sensitive images.
Provenance is another open question. Google DeepMind has made a pitch for SynthID, an AI media watermark technique that lets you trace files without spoiling the data. It’s yet to be seen whether Me Meme outputs will include some traceable watermark or metadata indicating AI help, which is an increasingly sought-after feature by industry and civil society groups focused on maintaining the authenticity of content.
There are also the economics at play. Google has previously restricted certain premium editing features on Photos to Google One plans working on non-Pixel phones. It’s not clear if Me Meme will be free, credit-regulated, or included as a subscriber benefit.
When you can try it and what to expect at launch
Me Meme is not available yet, and features discovered in code can sometimes appear weeks or even months later — or be scrapped. If it ships, expect to see it show up in Photos editing or creation surfaces alongside an onboarding card that walks you through picking a template and backing up your selfie. For best results, you need a clean, crisp photo that’s well-lit and shows your face clearly. For now, take this as a strong signal that Google wants to make your camera roll just as good at jokes as it already is at memories.