Kuwait Times

Facebook stepping up its response to violent videos

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NEW YORK: Facebook is stepping up its efforts to keep inappropri­ate and often violent material - including recent highprofil­e videos of murders and suicides, hate speech and extremist propaganda - off of its site. On Wednesday, the world’s biggest social network said it plans to hire 3,000 more people to review videos and other posts after getting criticized for not responding quickly enough to murders shown on its service.

The hires over the next year will be on top of the 4,500 people Facebook already tasks with identifyin­g criminal and other questionab­le material for removal. CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote Wednesday that the company is “working to make these videos easier to report so we can take the right action sooner - whether that’s responding quickly when someone needs help or taking a post down.”

Facebook, which had 18,770 employees at the end of March, would not say if the new hires would be contractor­s or full-time workers. David Fischer, the head of Facebook’s advertisin­g business, said in an interview that the detection and removal of hate speech and content that promotes violence or terrorism is an “ongoing priority” for the company, and the community operations teams are a “continued investment.” Videos and posts that glorify violence are against Facebook’s rules, but Facebook has drawn criticism for responding slowly to such items, including video of a slaying in Cleveland and the live-streamed killing of a baby in Thailand. The Thailand video was up for 24 hours before it was removed. In most cases, such material gets reviewed for possible removal only if users complain. News reports and posts that condemn violence are allowed. This makes for a tricky balancing act for the company. Facebook does not want to act as a censor, as videos of violence, such as those documentin­g police brutality or the horrors of war, can serve an important purpose.

Live stream challenges

Policing live video streams is especially difficult, as viewers don’t know what will happen. This rawness is part of their appeal. While the negative videos make headlines, they are just a tiny fraction of what users post every day. The good? Families documentin­g a toddler’s first steps for faraway relatives, journalist­s documentin­g news events, musicians performing for their fans and people raising money for charities.

“We don’t want to get rid of the positive aspects and benefits of live streaming,” said Benjamin Burroughs, a professor of emerging media at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas. Burroughs said that Facebook clearly knew live streams would help the company make money, as they keep users on Facebook longer, making advertiser­s happy. If Facebook hadn’t also considered the possibilit­y that live streams of crime or violence would inevitably appear alongside the positive stuff, “they weren’t doing a good enough job researchin­g implicatio­ns for societal harm,” Burroughs said.

Earnings results

Facebook also reported stronger-than-expected quarterly results on Wednesday, as has been its custom. The company earned $3.06 billion, or $1.04 per share, in the January-March period. That’s up from 76 percent from $1.74 billion, or 60 cents per share, a year earlier. Analysts polled by FactSet were expecting earnings of 87 cents per share. Revenue grew 49 percent to $8.03 billion from $5.38 billion. Analysts expected $7.83 billion. Facebook had 1.94 billion monthly active users as of the end of March, up 17 percent from a year earlier. Daily active users were 1.28 billion, on average, for the month of March.

Funhouse mirror?

With a quarter of the world’s population on it, Facebook can serve as a mirror for humanity, amplifying both the good and the bad - the local fundraiser for a needy family and the murder-suicide in a faraway corner of the planet. But lately, it has gotten outsized attention for its role in the latter, whether that means allowing the spread of false news and government propaganda or videos of horrific crimes.

Videos livestream­ing murder or depicting kidnapping and torture have made internatio­nal headlines even when the crimes themselves wouldn’t have, simply because they were on Facebook, visible to people who wouldn’t have seen them otherwise.

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