The Columbus Dispatch

Facebook says it’s getting rid of hateful accounts

- By Barbara Ortutay

NEW YORK — Facebook said it’s making progress on detecting hate speech, graphic violence and other violations of its rules, even before users see and report them.

Facebook said that during the April-toSeptembe­r period, it doubled the amount of hate speech it detected proactivel­y, compared with the previous six months.

The findings were spelled out Thursday in Facebook’s second semiannual report on enforcing community standards. The reports come as Facebook grapples with challenge after challenge, ranging from fake news to Facebook’s role in elections interferen­ce, hate speech and incitement to violence in the U.S., Myanmar, India and elsewhere.

The company also said it disabled more than 1.5 billion fake accounts in the latest six-month period, compared with 1.3 billion during the previous six months. Facebook said most of the fake accounts it found were financiall­y motivated, rather than aimed at misinforma­tion. The company has nearly 2.3 billion users.

Facebook’s report came a day after The New York Times published an extensive report on how Facebook has dealt with crisis after crisis over the past two years. The Times described Facebook’s strategy as “delay, deny and deflect.”

Facebook said Thursday it has cut ties with a Washington public relations firm, Definers, which the Times said Facebook hired to discredit opponents. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said during a call with reporters that he learned about the company’s relationsh­ip with Definers only when he read the Times report.

On community guidelines, Facebook also released metrics on issues such as child nudity and sexual exploitati­on, terrorist propaganda, bullying and spam. While it is disclosing how many violations it is catching, the company said it can’t always reliably measure how prevalent these things are on Facebook overall.

For instance, while Facebook took action on 2 million instances of bullying in the JulySeptem­ber period, this does not mean there were only 2 million instances of bullying during this time.

Facebook also plans to set up an independen­t body by next year for people to appeal decisions to remove — or leave up — posts that may violate its rules. Appeals are currently handled internally. Zuckerberg said creating an independen­t appeals body will prevent the concentrat­ion of “toomuch decision-making” within Facebook.

Facebook employs thousands of people to review posts, photos, comments and videos for violations. Some things are also detected without humans, using artificial intelligen­ce.

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