Current:Home > NewsSurpassing:Meta to adjust AI policies on content after board said they were "incoherent and confusing" -GrowthInsight
Surpassing:Meta to adjust AI policies on content after board said they were "incoherent and confusing"
TradeEdge Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 04:01:44
Meta will adjust its policies on Surpassingmanipulated and A.I.-generated content to begin to label ahead of the fall elections, after an independent body overseeing the company's content moderation found that previous policies were "incoherent and confusing," and said they should be "reconsidered."
The changes stem from the Meta Oversight Board's recomendations earlier this year issued in its review of a highly edited video of President Biden that appeared on Facebook. The video had been manipulated to make it appear as if Mr. Biden was repeatedly inappropriately touching his adult granddaughter's chest.
In the original video, taken in 2022, the president places an "I voted" sticker on his granddaughter after voting in the midterm elections. But the video under review by Meta's Oversight Board was looped and edited into a seven-second clip that critics said left a misleading impression.
The Oversight Board said that the video did not violate Meta's policies because it had not been manipulated with artificial intelligence (AI) and did not show Mr. Biden "saying words he did not say" or "doing something he did not do."
But the board added that the company's current policy on the issue was "incoherent, lacking in persuasive justification and inappropriately focused on how content is created, rather than on which specific harms it aims to prevent, such as disrupting electoral processes."
In a blog post published on Friday, Meta's Vice President of Content Policy Monika Bickert wrote that the company would begin to start labeling AI-generated content starting in May and will adjust its policies to label manipulated media with "informational labels and context," instead of removing video based on whether or not the post violates Meta's community standards, which include bans on voter interference, bullying and harassment or violence and incitement.
"The labels will cover a broader range of content in addition to the manipulated content that the Oversight Board recommended labeling," Bickert wrote. "If we determine that digitally-created or altered images, video or audio create a particularly high risk of materially deceiving the public on a matter of importance, we may add a more prominent label so people have more information and context."
Meta conceded that the Oversight Board's assessment of the social media giant's approach to manipulated videos had been "too narrow" because it only covered those "that are created or altered by AI to make a person appear to say something they didn't say."
Bickert said that the company's policy was written in 2020, "when realistic AI-generated content was rare and the overarching concern was about videos." She noted that AI technology has evolved to the point where "people have developed other kinds of realistic AI-generated content like audio and photos," and she agreed with the board that it's "important to address manipulation that shows a person doing something they didn't do."
"We welcome these commitments which represent significant changes in how Meta treats manipulated content," the Oversight Board wrote on X in response to the policy announcement.
This decision comes as AI and other editing tools make it easier than ever for users to alter or fabricate realistic-seeming video and audio clips. Ahead of the New Hampshire presidential primary in January, a fake robocall impersonating President Biden encouraged Democrats not to vote, raising concerns about misinformation and voter suppression going into November's general election.AI-generated content about former President Trump and Mr. Biden continues to be spread online.
- In:
- Meta
- Artificial Intelligence
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Former Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man
- Brian Houston, Hillsong Church founder, found not guilty of concealing his father's child sex crimes
- Federal judge rejects some parts of New Mexico campaign finance law
- Would a Texas law take away workers’ water breaks? A closer look at House Bill 2127
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Khadijah Haqq and Bobby McCray Break Up After 13 Years of Marriage
- Evacuation ordered after gas plant explosion; no injuries reported
- Evacuation ordered after gas plant explosion; no injuries reported
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Evacuation ordered after gas plant explosion; no injuries reported
Ranking
- Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
- After Israeli raids, Palestinian police struggle in militant hotbed, reflecting region on the brink
- Hilary grows into major hurricane in Pacific off Mexico and could bring heavy rain to US Southwest
- FEMA has paid out nearly $4 million to Maui survivors, a figure expected to grow significantly
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Ravens sign veteran edge rusher Jadeveon Clowney
- AP Week in Pictures: Global | Aug 11 - Aug. 18, 2023
- Trump's D.C. trial should not take place until April 2026, his lawyers argue
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Houses evacuated after police find explosive in home of man being arrested
Second quarter Walmart sales were up. Here's why.
Florida man missing for five months found dead in Mississippi River
What to watch: O Jolie night
'Motivated by insatiable greed': Miami real estate agent who used PPP funds on Bentley sentenced
Metals, government debt, and a climate lawsuit
Fired founder of right-wing org Project Veritas is under investigation in New York