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Facebook removes 22.5mn hate speech content, 1.5bn fake accounts in Q2
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IANS | 11 Aug, 2020
Facebook on Tuesday said that it purged 22.5 million pieces of hate
speech content in the second quarter (April-June) this year, increased
from 9.6 million pieces of content in Q1, and its proactive detection
rate for hate speech increased 6 points from 89 per cent to 95 per cent.
When it comes to fake accounts, Facebook said it removed 1,5 billion such accounts in Q2, down from 1.7 billion accounts in Q1.
The
reason for the decline the social network gave was that when it blocks
more attempts, there are fewer fake accounts for it to disable, "which
has led to a general decline in accounts actioned since Q1 2019".
"We
estimate that fake accounts represented approximately 5 per cent of our
worldwide monthly active users (MAU) on Facebook during Q2," Guy Rosen,
VP Integrity at Facebook, said in a blog post detailing the sixth
edition of ‘Community Standards Enforcement Report'.
On
Instagram, the proactive detection rate for hate speech increased 39
points from 45 per cent to 84 per cent in the June quarter, said
Facebook.
It resulted in action on 3.3 million pieces of hate speech content in Q2, up from 808,900 in Q1.
"These
increases (on Instagram) were driven by expanding our proactive
detection technologies in English and Spanish," Rosen said.
Another area where Facebook claimed it saw improvements was content related to terrorism.
"On Facebook, the amount of content we took action on increased from 6.3 million in Q1 to 8.7 million in Q2," Rosen informed.
"We
saw increases in the amount of content we took action on connected to
organized hate on Instagram and bullying and harassment on both Facebook
and Instagram".
Facebook said that since it prioritised removing
harmful content over measuring certain efforts during this time, it was
unable to calculate the prevalence of violent and graphic content, and
adult nudity and sexual activity.
"We want people to be
confident that the numbers we report around harmful content are
accurate, so we will undergo an independent, third-party audit, starting
in 2021, to validate the numbers we publish in our Community Standards
Enforcement Report," Rosen said.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic,
Facebook sent its content reviewers home in March and relied more
heavily on the technology to review content.
The comlany said it
has since brought many reviewers back online from home and, where it is
safe, a smaller number into the office.
The company admitted
that the number of appeals against the removal of accounts etc was much
lower in Q2 "because we couldn't always offer them".
"We let
people know about this and if they felt we made a mistake, we still gave
people the option to tell us they disagreed with our decision".
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