However, the social media giant acknowledged that gaps remain in its "election integrity" efforts.
Business
Standard : Facebook has said it has made strides in its
efforts to prevent online abuses in the Indian national election that
starts this week but acknowledged that gaps remain in its "election
integrity" efforts.
During
a media tour of the company's election operations centre at its Menlo
Park headquarters in California on Friday, company officials touted
new fact-checking efforts for suppressing misinformation and
technological advances such as the ability to detect when videos had
been doctored.
But
Katie Harbath, Facebook's
public policy director for global elections, said measures including
a better system for verifying the buyers of political advertisements
remained imperfect and called for more government regulation of
ad-spending disclosures.
Excoriated
for failing to stop Russian manipulation in the 2016 U.S.
presidential vote, Facebook has ramped up efforts to prevent abuses
in subsequent elections, including the 2018 American midterms and the
recent Brazilian and Mexican contests. Governments in many countries,
including India and the UK, are contemplating strict new regulations
for social media companies.
India,
where Facebook has more users than in any other country, is shaping
up as a major test. On April 1, the company said it had removed more
than 500 accounts and 138 pages linked to India's opposition Congress
party for "coordinated inauthentic behavior," Facebook's
term for the use of fake accounts and other deceptive methods to
promote a message.
It
also took down a page with 2 million followers which, according to
Facebook's review partner Atlantic Council think tank, was "pro-BJP"
(the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party) and a supporter of Prime Minister
Narendra Modi.
Harbath
said the company can now quickly detect viral, politically sensitive
stories and refer them for fact-checking by outside organizations.
The officials also touted heavy investment in technology for
detecting doctored videos and text inside pictures, but acknowledged
that they have been unable to stop some duplicates of videos that
have been identified as spurious.
Facebook
has partnered with seven fact-checkers in India. If a post is found
to be untrue, the company says it reduces the circulation of such
fake posts by more than 80 percent, but slightly modified versions of
the same images, video or text can escape detection and spread
further.
No comments:
Post a Comment