This has been over social media all day
Social media giants warn of AI moderation errors as coronavirus empties offices
17
March, 2020
SAN
FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Alphabet Inc’s YouTube, Facebook Inc (FB.O)
and Twitter Inc (TWTR.N) warned on Monday that more videos and other
content could be erroneously removed for policy violations, as the
companies empty offices and rely on automated takedown software
during the coronavirus pandemic.
In
a blog post, Google said that to reduce the need for people to come
into offices, YouTube and other business divisions are temporarily
relying more on artificial intelligence and automated tools to find
problematic content.
Such
software is not always as accurate as humans, which leads to errors,
it added, however. And “turnaround times for appeals against these
decisions may be slower,” it said.
Facebook
followed suit, saying it would work with contract vendors this week
to send home all content reviewers home indefinitely, with pay.
The
social media company drew public criticism last week for asking
policy enforcers to continue coming to work, as it lacks secure
technology to conduct moderation remotely.
Facebook
also said the decision to rely more on automated tools, which learn
to identify offensive material by analyzing digital clues for aspects
common to previous takedowns, has limitations.
“We
may see some longer response times and make more mistakes as a
result,” it said.
Twitter
said it too would step up use of similar automation, but would not
ban users based solely on automated enforcement, because of accuracy
concerns.
The
three Silicon Valley internet services giants, like many companies
worldwide, have asked employees and contractors to work from home if
possible, to slow the fast-spreading respiratory disease. Mass
gatherings for sports, cultural and religious events have been
canceled globally.
Google
said human review of automated policy decisions also would be slower
for other products and phone support would be limited.
Its
content rules cover submissions such as campaigns on its ad network,
apps uploaded to the Google Play store and business reviews posted to
Google Maps.
“Some
users, advertisers, developers and publishers may experience delays
in some support response times for non-critical services, which will
now be supported primarily through our chat, email, and self-service
channels,” Google said.
The
content review operations of Google and Facebook span several
countries, such as India, Ireland, Singapore and the United States.
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