The Facebook Oversight Board overturned 75% of Meta's initial content moderation decision in 12 high-profile cases disputed last year, per a new report.
he Oversight Board’s 2022 annual report, shared with Gizmodo Tuesday. Facebook and Instagram users appealed Meta’s decision to remove their content 1,290,942 times, which the Oversight Board said marks a 25% increase in the number of appeals over the year prior. Two-thirds of those appeals concerned alleged violence/incitement and hate speech.
“By publicly making these recommendations, and publicly monitoring Meta’s responses and implementation, we have opened a space for transparent dialogue with the company that did not previously exist,” the Oversight Board said.Despite receiving more than one million appeals last year, the Oversight Board only makes binding decisions in a small handful of high-profile cases. Of those, the Oversight Board overturned Meta’s original content moderation decision 75% of the time, per its report.
México Últimas Noticias, México Titulares
Similar News:También puedes leer noticias similares a ésta que hemos recopilado de otras fuentes de noticias.
Iowa pig farmer warns Supreme Court upholding 'troubling' California law will raise prices, destroy businessesA fourth-generation Iowa farmer, Dwight Mogler, reacted to the Supreme Court upholding a California law that could put pork producers out of business.
Leer más »
The Supreme Court’s devastating blow to the Clean Water Act | EditorialThis is a move so extreme that even Justice Brett Kavanaugh recognized that it defies logic.
Leer más »
Editorial: The Supreme Court just fired a shot at how Illinois handles delinquent property taxesPrivate vultures have been scamming the Illinois system of tax sales. But the Supreme Court has implied the practice needs to change.
Leer más »
‘Trump too small’ trademark clash to be decided by Supreme CourtThe dispute is over whether lawyer Steve Elster can register 'Trump too small' as a trademark for use on T-shirts.
Leer más »
Supreme Court to review trademark dispute over ‘TRUMP TOO SMALL’The Supreme Court announced Monday it would hear a trademark case over the use of a person’s name without the individual’s permission in a dispute over the phrase “TRUMP TOO SMALL” — a reference to former President Donald Trump.
Leer más »
Supreme Court Will Decide Whether T-Shirts Criticizing Trump Are Banned By Trademark LawThe phrase “Trump Too Small” shouldn’t be banned under federal trademark laws, the case argues.
Leer más »