Eswatini Financial Times

Misinforma­tion, harmful content, abuses of AI

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Misinforma­tion, harmful content, abuses of AI enerated content on social media platforms will be a thing of the past as social media giant Meta has collaborat­ed with the Electoral Commission of SA (IEC) empowering voters ahead of the pivotal national elections next month.

Meta - which owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp - is working directly with the IEC to combat the spread of misinforma­tion during the May 29 elections.

This is not the first time Meta is working with the IEC as they collaborat­ed during the 2021 Local Government Elections, and has also been implementi­ng a number of initiative­s to prepare the upcoming elections since last year.

Meta has already invested more than $20 billion (R376bn) in covering more than 200 elections globally in eight years since 2016, with a team of more than 40 000 people working on safety and security only.

In an interview with Business Report yesterday, Meta’s public policy director for sub-Saharan Africa, Balkissa Idé Siddo, said that they had drawn from lessons learned from all these elections to actually build a specific approach to the South African election.

Siddo said the approach decided to adopt in South actually based both on the experience in other elections, expertise, and conversati­ons with experts.

“We are going to put in place a; South African dedicated election operations centre, bringing together experts from across the company, from threat intelligen­ce, engineers, data analysts, legal people, and colleagues from South Africa,” she said.

“So it’s going to be really a robust team brought together to monitor potential that Meta Africa was company’s its internal it has had threats during the election, and take action to counter those threats.”

A recent study from Brandeis University, George Mason University, Carnegie Mellon University, and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology revealed a disturbing trend of entities engaging in disinforma­tion wars, using the anonymity and reach of social media to influence political and social narratives.

The study presented a novel preventive technique called “ex-ante content moderation,” which entails giving accounts a disinforma­tion score determined by how likely they were to disseminat­e misleading informatio­n.

The goal of this strategy is to proactivel­y detect and lessen the effects of misinforma­tion before a large audience is exposed to it.

Siddo said Meta’s approach was based on five main strategies and tactics.

(Business Report)

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