More than 500 million fake Facebook accounts have been removed in first quarter of 2018 according to a new Facebook Community Standards Enforcement report.
The social network released data in a new Facebook Community Standards Enforcement report.
More than 500 million fake Facebook accounts have been removed,
according to a new Facebook Community Standards Enforcement report
released on Tuesday.
Facebook has approximately 2.2 billion monthly active users and according to the report, 583 million fake Facebook accounts were disabled in the first three months of 2018.
Guy Rosen, Facebook’s vice president of product management said that
of the 583 million fake Facebook accounts removed between January 1 and
March 31 of this year.
Facebook released the report in an effort to be more transparent and
allow its users to see what’s being done to reduce the amount of
Facebook content accounts that violate its Community Standards.
The Facebook Community Standards Enforcement Report also covers how
increased efforts have been made to remove content that contains graphic
violence, adult nudity, sexual activity, terrorist propaganda, hate
speech and spam messages.
AI used to remove fake Facebook accounts removed
According to Facebook, it has been relying on artificial intelligence
to detect fake profiles and other content that violates its policies.
The social network says it has built artificial intelligence technology
to increase its ability to find and flag questionable content before
most users can. Facebook says it is continuing to improve its
algorithms, metrics and methodologies to detect content that violates
its Community Standards.
In addition to the 583 million fake Facebook accounts that were
disabled, 837 million pieces of spam content were also removed in the
first quarter of 2018. The social network claims it was able to use
artificial intelligence to find and flag the content before it was
reported.
Although artificial intelligence has helped with detecting fake
Facebook accounts and spam, there still needs to be some improvements
made in artificial intelligence technology to detect hate speech.
“Technology isn’t going to solve all of it, but we will make progress,” Rosen told the Financial Times.
That’s where effort from its users becomes more important than ever.
While algorithms or different forms of artificial intelligence can be
used to detect and remove fake and offensive content before it spreads
to the Facebook community, the social network still relies on its users
to submit questionable content to be checked by Facebook’s review teams.
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