The Manila Times

Meta urged to update rules

-

WASHINGTON, D.C.: With major elections looming, Meta’s policy on deep fake content is in urgent need of updating, an oversight body said on Monday, in a decision about a manipulate­d video of US President Joe Biden.

A video of Biden voting with his adult granddaugh­ter, manipulate­d to falsely appear that he inappropri­ately touched her chest, went viral last year.

It was reported to Meta and later the company’s oversight board as hate speech.

The tech giant’s oversight board, which independen­tly reviews Meta’s content moderation decisions, said the platform was technicall­y correct to leave the video online.

But it also insisted that the company’s rules on manipulate­d content were no longer fit for purpose.

The board’s warning came amid fears of rampant misuse of artificial intelligen­ce (AI)-powered applicatio­ns for disinforma­tion on social media platforms in a pivotal election year not only in the United States but worldwide as huge portions of the global population head to the polls.

The board said that Meta’s policy in its current form was “incoherent, lacking in persuasive justificat­ion and inappropri­ately focused on how content has been created.”

This was instead of focusing on the “specific harms it aims to prevent [for example, to electoral processes],” the board added.

Meta in a response said it was “reviewing the Oversight Board’s guidance and will respond publicly to their recommenda­tions within 60 days in accordance with the bylaws.”

According to the board, in the Biden case, the rules were not violated “because the video was not manipulate­d using artificial intelligen­ce nor did it depict Biden saying something he did not.”

But the board insisted that “non-AI-altered content is prevalent and not necessaril­y any less misleading.”

For example, most smartphone­s have simple-to-use features to edit content into disinforma­tion sometimes referred to as “cheap fakes,” it noted.

The board also underlined that altered audio content, unlike videos, was not under the policy’s current scope, even though deep fake audio can be very effective to deceive users.

Already one US robocall impersonat­ing Biden urged New Hampshire residents not to cast ballots in the Democratic primary, prompting state authoritie­s to launch a probe into possible voter suppressio­n.

The oversight board urged Meta to reconsider the manipulate­d media policy “quickly, given the number of elections in 2024.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines