Santa Fe New Mexican

Facebook will use AI to remove extremist posts

- By Sherra Frenkel

SAN FRANCISCO — Responding to complaints that not enough is being done to keep extremist content off social media platforms, Facebook said Thursday that it would begin using artificial intelligen­ce to help remove inappropri­ate content.

Artificial intelligen­ce will largely be used in conjunctio­n with human moderators who review content on a case-by-case basis. But developers hope its use will be expanded over time, said Monika Bickert, the head of global policy management at Facebook.

One of the first applicatio­ns for the technology is identifyin­g content that clearly violates Facebook’s terms of use, such as photos and videos of beheadings or other gruesome images, and stopping users from uploading them to the site.

“Tragically, we have seen more terror attacks recently,” Bickert said. “As we see more attacks, we see more people asking what social media companies are doing to keep this content offline.”

In a blog post published Thursday, Facebook described how an artificial-intelligen­ce system would, over time, teach itself to identify key phrases that were previously flagged for being used to bolster a known terrorist group. The same system, they wrote, could learn to identify Facebook users who associate with clusters of pages or groups that promote extremist content, or who return to the site again and again, creating fake accounts in order to spread such content online.

“Ideally, one day our technology will address everything,” Bickert said. “It’s in developmen­t right now.” But human moderators, she added, are still needed to review content for context.

Brian Fishman, Facebook’s lead policy manager for counterter­rorism, said the company had a team of 150 specialist­s working in 30 languages doing such reviews.

Facebook has been criticized for not doing enough to monitor its site for content posted by extremist groups. Last month, Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain announced that she would challenge internet companies — including Facebook — to do more to monitor and stop them.

“We cannot allow this ideology the safe space it needs to breed,” May said after the bombing of a concert in Manchester that killed 22 people. “Yet that is precisely what the internet provides.”

J.M. Berger, a fellow with the Internatio­nal Centre for Counter-Terrorism at The Hague, said a large part of the challenge for companies like Facebook is figuring out what qualifies as terrorism.

Bickert said Facebook was hopeful that the new artificial intelligen­ce technology could be used to counter any form of extremism that violated the company’s terms of use, although for the time being it will be narrowly focused.

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