Tech

Facebook Says It Removed Tens Of Millions Of Posts That Break Rules On Child Pornography, Hate Speech And Harassment

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  • Facebook said it removed tens of millions of posts that broke its rules regarding child pornography, hate speech and harassment in a Wednesday transparency report.
  • Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said the tech giant is working “harder to identify” harmful content and “take action on it” during a conference call.
  • The social media site took action against a total of 20.8 million pieces of content related to the sexual exploitation of children, suicide, self-injury and drug and firearms sales in the third quarter of 2019.

Facebook said it removed tens of millions of posts that broke its rules regarding child pornography, hate speech and harassment in a Wednesday transparency report.

The tech giant said the report reflects its efforts to combat harmful practices that take place on its platform after the social media site received scrutiny for not doing enough to police child predators and hate speech in a Wednesday press release.

“We’ve made progress in important areas such as hate speech, child exploitation imagery, and posts about illegal drugs and firearm sales but we still have more to do. We’ll continue to invest in people and systems to combat harmful content on our platforms,” Facebook’s official Twitter account wrote in a Wednesday tweet.

Facebook took action against a total of 20.8 million pieces of content related to suicide and self-injury, child nudity and sexual exploitation, and drugs and firearms sales in the third quarter of 2019, according to the release. (RELATED: Facebook Announces Effort To Clearly Mark Fake News Ahead Of 2020)

Of those 20.8 million pieces of content taken down in the third quarter of 2019, 2.5 million posts related to suicide and self-injury were removed; 11.6 million pieces of content related to child nudity and sexual exploitation of children were removed; and 6.7 million pieces of content relating to drug and firearms sales were removed — all of which were proactively detected more than 93% of the time.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said during a Wednesday conference call that while some people might interpret the large content removal numbers Facebook reports as an indication it has “so much more harmful content” than other platforms, the numbers actually show the tech giant’s efforts to work “harder to identify this and take action on it” than other sites, according to Washington Post tech reporter Tony Romm.

Facebook has taken major strides to increase its transparency regarding the content it removes and removal policies since a Sept. 28 New York Times investigation found that encryption technology gives protection to sexual predators to who engage in illicit behavior with children online and makes it more difficult for law enforcement to track such criminals.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives to testify before a joint hearing of the US Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee and Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill, April 10, 2018 in Washington, DC. / AFP PHOTO / Brendan Smialowski via Getty Images)

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives to testify before a joint hearing of the US Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee and Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill, April 10, 2018 in Washington, DC. / AFP PHOTO / Brendan Smialowski via Getty Images)

The report found child abusers allegedly used Facebook Messenger in nearly 12 million instances of sexual abuse material out of 18.4 million instances that were reported, according to The NYT, citing people who studied the reports.

“The reason why the vast majority come from Facebook is because we work harder than any other company to identify this behavior,” Zuckerberg said when the report was brought up during an Oct. 26 hearing in front of the House Financial Services Committee regarding Facebook’s cryptocurrency project.

Zuckerberg continued to explain that Facebook builds “sophisticated systems” to identify child sex abusers on the platform, adding that he doesn’t “think Facebook is the only place on the internet where this behavior is happening. I think the fact that the vast majority of those results from us reflects the fact we actually do a better job than anyone else of finding it and acting on it.”

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