Meta rolls out new AI content enforcement systems while reducing reliance on third-party vendors | TechCrunch
Briefly

Meta rolls out new AI content enforcement systems while reducing reliance on third-party vendors | TechCrunch
"While we'll still have people who review content, these systems will be able to take on work that's better-suited to technology, like repetitive reviews of graphic content or areas where adversarial actors are constantly changing their tactics, such as with illicit drug sales or scams."
"Meta believes these AI systems can detect more violations with greater accuracy, better prevent scams, respond more quickly to real-world events, and reduce over-enforcement. Early tests show they can detect twice as much violating adult sexual solicitation content as review teams while reducing error rates by more than 60%."
"Experts will design, train, oversee, and evaluate our AI systems, measuring performance and making the most complex, high‑impact decisions. For example, people will continue to play a key role in how we make the highest risk and most complex decisions."
Meta is rolling out more advanced AI systems to manage content enforcement across its platforms, reducing reliance on third-party vendors. These systems will handle repetitive tasks like reviewing graphic content and detecting evolving threats such as drug sales and scams. Early testing shows the AI can detect twice as much adult sexual solicitation content with 60% fewer errors, identify impersonation accounts, prevent account takeovers, and mitigate approximately 5,000 scam attempts daily. Human experts will continue designing, training, and overseeing these systems while making high-risk decisions. Meta believes this approach will improve violation detection accuracy, prevent scams more effectively, respond faster to real-world events, and reduce over-enforcement.
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