One of the small things I wanted to test in DIA was whether its built-in AI could actually help with real social media replies, not just sit off to the side like a generic chatbot.
In this example, I was inside a Facebook group and highlighted a comment to see whether DIA understood the context well enough to help me respond.
Quick Answer
DIA can detect highlighted text on a page, use that selected text as context, and draft a reply based on what you ask it to say. In my test, I highlighted a Facebook group comment and asked DIA to write a response saying that Oakley has better battery.
The browser generated the reply, offered a copy button, and when I clicked into the Facebook reply box, DIA also showed an Insert button. Clicking Insert pasted the drafted response into the form so I could review it before posting.
How It Worked
The useful part here is that I did not have to copy the text manually or move it into a separate chatbot. I simply highlighted the text on the page, and DIA recognized that I had selected something.
Once the highlighted text was available in DIA's chat sidebar, I could ask it for a specific kind of response. In this case, the instruction was simple: write a response saying Oakley has better battery.
DIA then generated a reply based on that selected context. From there, I had two options: copy the response manually or insert it directly into the active text field.
The Insert Button Matters
The part that stood out to me was the Insert button. If I clicked inside the Facebook comment box first, DIA recognized where the text could go and changed the action from just copying to inserting.
That is a practical difference. Copy and paste works, but Insert makes the workflow feel more connected to the page you are already using. It saves a step and keeps the AI assistance closer to the actual task.
In the test, clicking Insert placed the drafted reply directly into the Facebook form box. At that point, I could still read it, edit it, or decide not to post it.
What DIA Can And Cannot Do
DIA was helpful for preparing the reply, but it did not post the comment on its own. That is an important distinction.
The browser can help you get to the point where the response is ready, but the final action is still yours. You still have to review the text and click the button to submit it.
That is probably the right balance for social media. AI can help with wording, but I would not want it blindly posting inside Facebook groups or other public spaces without my confirmation.
Where This Is Useful
This kind of feature is most useful when you already know what you want to say but want help phrasing it quickly. It could help with short replies, group discussions, customer comments, or any place where you are responding to text already visible on the page.
It is not a replacement for judgment. You still need to make sure the reply sounds like you, fits the conversation, and does not say something you would not actually stand behind.
But for quick social media replies, DIA's highlight-to-response workflow is one of those features that makes more sense when you see it happen directly on the page.
Key Takeaways
- DIA can use highlighted text on a webpage as context for an AI-generated reply.
- You do not need to manually copy the selected text into the chat.
- When a text box is active, DIA can show an Insert button to place the drafted reply directly into the form.
- The browser helps prepare the response, but it does not post the comment for you.
- You still need to review, edit, and submit the final reply yourself.
Watch the Video
The video above to see the full DIA social media reply workflow in action, including the highlighted text, generated response, Insert button, and final review step before posting.