Home Platforms The Amount Of Hate Speech Facebook Found On Its Platform Doubled Between Q1 And Q2

The Amount Of Hate Speech Facebook Found On Its Platform Doubled Between Q1 And Q2

SHARE:
The official advertising boycott against Facebook may be over, but the same can’t be said for hate speech on the platform.

The official advertising boycott against Facebook may be over, but the same can’t be said for hate speech on the platform.

Facebook took down 22.5 million posts in the second quarter alone for violating its policies against hate speech, which is more than double the 9.6 million pieces of hateful content Facebook removed last quarter, according to its sixth community standards enforcement report, released on Tuesday.

For comparison’s sake, the amount of hate-related content Facebook removed in Q2 is nine times higher than the amount of hate content it took action on just two years ago.

Not to be outdone, the amount of hateful content also increased on Instagram, from just over 808,000 posts in Q1 to 3.3 million in the second quarter.

Rather than attributing this to an overall increase in the quantity of hateful content being posted to Facebook and Instagram, Guy Rosen, Facebook’s VP of integrity (what a title), said that the uptick is largely related to the progress Facebook is making with its automated detection systems despite disruptions in the human moderation process due to COVID-19.

Facebook claims that its AI was able to proactively catch 95% of the hate speech taken down in Q2, up from 88.8% last quarter and 24% from when Facebook first started publishing its community standards enforcement reports a couple of years ago. The proactive detection rate also increased on Instagram from 44.5% to 84.2% for the same reason.

The second quarter numbers also reflect Facebook expanding its automation tech to languages other than English, including Spanish and Burmese, the national language of Myanmar, where Facebook has been used to incite violence against Rohingya refugees.

Facebook has spent most of 2020 (and 2019 … and 2018 … and, anyway) on its back heels for failure to consistently enforce its policies against hate speech and misinformation.

Although the advertiser boycott in July organized by civil rights organizations will most likely barely dent Facebook’s revenue in Q3, it highlighted the prevalence of hate speech on the platform.

Because Facebook knows that no one trusts it or its numbers, it’s undergoing an RFP process to find an external auditor to conduct an independent review of the metrics in its community standards and enforcement report. The audit should take place sometime in 2021.

In other news, Facebook announced a policy change on Tuesday to ban black face images and more implicit forms of hate speech, such as antisemitic stereotypes that “Jewish people control the world.”

Because apparently until now those were both things you could still post on Facebook.

Must Read

The In-Game Ad Market is Expanding, One SDK At A Time

In-game ad platform Gadsme released a new SDK for non-Unity game engines. It’s the latest example of in-game ad platforms expanding SDK support in a quest for more premium inventory.

What Publishers Need To Know About Floor Pricing

At Tuesday’s Prebid Summit, a panel of publisher and pub tech execs shared tips for how publishers can get the most out their flooring strategies.

Comic: Shopper Marketing Data

Why Mondelez Piloted A Shopper Marketing Test Between Albertsons And Fetch

“I always said, I think we need to change our title, because it’s not the old school shopper marketing,” said Anne Martin, director of shopper marketing for Mondelez International, which owns Oreo, Ritz, and a variety of other snacks.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

Forget The FUD, Now DoubleVerify Wants Advertisers To Get Back Into The News

Even brand safety companies think news blocking has gone too far. DV is exploring ways to help advertisers support legitimate news and just hired its first-ever head of news.

To Reduce The Ad Tech Tax, Sovrn Expands Its SaaS Pricing Model

Sovrn is now offering its header bidding managed service, dubbed Ad Management, as self-serve software for a flat CPM fee.

play button with many coins isolated on blue background. The concept of monetization of the video. Making money on video content. minimal style. 3d rendering

Exclusive: Connatix And JW Player Merge To Create A One-Stop Shop For Video Monetization

On Wednesday, video monetization platforms Connatix and JW Player announced plans to merge into a new entity called JWP Connatix. The deal was first rumored in July.