Meta will move away from human content moderators in favor of more AI

A little more than a year after ditching third-party fact checkers and rolling back much of its proactive content moderation, the company says it will further "transform" its approach by drastically reducing the number of human moderators in favor of AI-based systems.

Meta will move away from human content moderators in favor of more AI
Meta will move away from human content moderators in favor of more AI Photo: Engadget

A little more than a year after ditching third-party fact checkers and rolling back much of its proactive content moderation, the company says it will further "transform" its approach by drastically reducing the number of human moderators in favor of AI-based systems.

The company says the change will happen "over the next few years," and will allow the company to catch more issues faster than its current approach.

Meta didn't say how much of its contract workforce might be cut as it makes this transition.

The company employs thousands of contractors around the world to review content flagged by its AI systems and user reports among other tasks.

The company said that as it shifts its approach humans will "play a key role" in "critical decisions" and aid in training and other tasks.

"Experts will design, train, oversee, and evaluate our AI systems, measuring performance and making the most complex, high‑impact decisions," Meta said in an update.

"For example, people will continue to play a key role in how we make the highest risk and most critical decisions, such as appeals of account disablement or reports to law enforcement."
The company has been testing LLM-based systems for content moderation for a while and says that early tests have had "promising" results.

Another advantage is that its AI can handle languages used by "98% of people online," compared with the 80 languages currently supported by its moderation capabilities.

In the nearer term, Meta is introducing an AI powered "support assistant" that will help users with certain types of account issues.

The chatbot, which is rolling out now in the Facebook and Instagram app, will be able to help users report content and manage appeals, reset passwords and manage other account settings.

It will also be able to help people who get locked out of their accounts "starting with select cases in the US and Canada."

Source: This article was originally published by Engadget

Read Full Original Article →

Share this article

Comments (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Leave a Comment

Maximum 2000 characters