How Platforms Could Benefit from the Precautionary Principle | Centre for International... - 0 views
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Risk assessments: First, companies could conduct risk-based assessments, as commonly happens for large-scale infrastructure projects. No engineer builds a bridge without calculating its stability. If platform companies want to be our online infrastructure, we might ask for similar levels of care as for physical infrastructure.
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First, if governments used the precautionary principle to ask for risk assessments, these assessments themselves would not be foolproof and could be gamed.
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Third, the precautionary principle can lock in big players and stifle innovation. If risk assessments are expensive, only the larger companies will be able to afford them.
A Harmonised European (technical) Standard-Provision of EU Law! (Judgment in C-613/14 J... - 0 views
The secret lives of Facebook moderators in America - The Verge - 0 views
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It’s a place where, in stark contrast to the perks lavished on Facebook employees, team leaders micromanage content moderators’ every bathroom and prayer break; where employees, desperate for a dopamine rush amid the misery, have been found having sex inside stairwells and a room reserved for lactating mothers; where people develop severe anxiety while still in training, and continue to struggle with trauma symptoms long after they leave; and where the counseling that Cognizant offers them ends the moment they quit — or are simply let go.
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The moderators told me it’s a place where the conspiracy videos and memes that they see each day gradually lead them to embrace fringe views. One auditor walks the floor promoting the idea that the Earth is flat. A former employee told me he has begun to question certain aspects of the Holocaust. Another former employee, who told me he has mapped every escape route out of his house and sleeps with a gun at his side, said: “I no longer believe 9/11 was a terrorist attack.”
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The use of contract labor also has a practical benefit for Facebook: it is radically cheaper. The median Facebook employee earns $240,000 annually in salary, bonuses, and stock options. A content moderator working for Cognizant in Arizona, on the other hand, will earn just $28,800 per year. The arrangement helps Facebook maintain a high profit margin. In its most recent quarter, the company earned $6.9 billion in profits, on $16.9 billion in revenue. And while Zuckerberg had warned investors that Facebook’s investment in security would reduce the company’s profitability, profits were up 61 percent over the previous year.
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Online Harms White Paper: Two comments on "harms" - Hugh Tomlinson QC | Inforrm's Blog - 0 views
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umber of the other “harms” identified in the White Paper may also constitute breaches of data protection law.
The white paper on online harms is a global first. It has never been more needed | John... - 0 views
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Could it be, another wondered, that the flurry of apocalyptic angst reflected the extent to which the Californian Ideology (which held that cyberspace was beyond the reach of the state) had seeped into the souls of even well-intentioned critics?
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In reality, the problem we have is not the internet so much as those corporations that ride on it and allow some unacceptable activities to flourish on their platforms
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This is what ethicists call “obligation responsibility” and in this country we call a duty of care. I
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The Butterfly Effect of Publishing References to Harmonised Standards in the L series |... - 0 views
European regulation of video-sharing platforms: what's new, and will it work? | LSE Med... - 0 views
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his set of rules creates a novel regulatory model
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Again, leaving regulatory powers to a private entity without any public oversight is clearly not the right solution. But this is also not what, in my opinion, the new AVMSD does
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But without transparency and information about individual cases, you surely can’t say whether the takedowns are really improving the media environment, or the providers are just trying to get rid of any controversial content – or, indeed, the content somebody just happens to be complaining about.
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The new Audiovisual Media Services Directive: turning video hosting platforms into priv... - 0 views
A more transparent and accountable Internet? Here's how. | LSE Media Policy Project - 0 views
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Procedural accountability” was a focus of discussion at the March 2018 workshop on platform responsibility convened by LSE’s Truth, Trust and Technology Commission. The idea is that firms should be held to account for the effectiveness of their internal processes in tackling the negative social impact of their services.
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o be credible and trusted, information disclosed by online firms will need to be independently verified.
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Piloting a Transparency Reporting Framework
Facebook and the EU, or the failure of self-regulation | The Guest Blog - 0 views
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How did we let this happen? Why do we appear so weak?
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For years Brussels has been the champion of self-regulation. The dogma is – at least publicly – based on the assumption that companies know best how to tackle some of the challenges.
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Our failure to understand the underlying challenges and a failure of regulation.
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Is the Era of "Permissionless Innovation" and Avoidance of Regulation on the Internet F... - 0 views
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avoidance of regulation that the Silicon Valley platforms
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It hasn’t been a great couple of weeks for the “Don’t Be Evil” company.
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The Supreme Court had upheld a lower court ruling requiring Google to delist from its global search results references to a rogue Canadian company that is the subject of an injunction in British Columbia (B.C) f
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Facebook Publishes Enforcement Numbers for the First Time | Facebook Newsroom - 0 views
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86% of which was identified by our technology before it was reported to Facebook.
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For hate speech, our technology still doesn’t work that well and so it needs to be checked by our review teams. We removed 2.5 million pieces of hate speech in Q1 2018 — 38% of which was flagged by our technology.
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addition, in many areas — whether it’s spam, porn or fake accounts — we’re up against sophisticated adversaries who continually change tactics to circumvent our controls,
What Facebook isn't telling us about its fight against online abuse - Laura Bliss | Inf... - 0 views
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In a six-month period from October 2017 to March 20178, 21m sexually explicit pictures, 3.5m graphically violent posts and 2.5m forms of hate speech were removed from its site. These figures help reveal some striking points.
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As expected, the data indicates that the problem is getting worse.
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For instance, between January and March it was estimated that for every 10,000 messages online, between 22 and 27 contained graphic violence, up from 16 to 19 in the previous three months.
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Mr. Zuckerberg: cleaning 99% of extremist content from FB is not enough | The Guest Blog - 0 views
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these same AI systems can are being used by adversaries to circumvent detection.
The IPKat: YouTube's new Transparency Report reveals centrality of automated notices an... - 0 views
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