New information from internal Facebook documents reveals that the social media company's misinformation reaches much further than the United States.
The Dear Utol (2025): My Bilmoko GF Episode 34documents, dubbed The Facebook Papers and gathered by whistleblower Frances Haugen, demonstrate Facebook's lack of resources and social awareness in countries like India, Myanmar, and Sri Lanka, leading to the spread of hate speech and radical political sentiment that could be linked to acts of violence and have an influence on national elections.
Facebook isn't as plugged into the social pulse of its own website outside the United States, but the company is generally aware that its platform has an impact on politics in such countries, according to The New York Times. Internal researchers have conducted tests and field studies on Facebook's algorithm in India, where the News Feed quickly yielded hate speech, misinformation, and celebrations of violence. This type of content came from both legitimate users and uncensored bots.
"Following this test user’s News Feed, I’ve seen more images of dead people in the past three weeks than I’ve seen in my entire life total," wrote a researcher in an internal Facebook report.
The documents also show that Facebook has a lopsided approach to battling misinformation, with 87 percent of its global budget dedicated to identifying misinformation solely in the U.S., while the remaining 13 percent handles the rest of the world.
This comparatively tiny set of resources results in ineffective measures in places like India, with its own host of nationally distinct radical politics. It seems like a wild misallocation of focus when you consider that India is Facebook's largest market, with 340 million users across its platforms.
Facebook users there are easily fed graphic posts that spout anti-Muslim and anti-Pakistan rhetoric in any of the country's 22 official languages. According to the Times, Facebook's AI is only trained in five of these languages, with human reviewers for "some others."
But as found in the company's own documents, much of the dangerous content in Hindi or Bengali — two of India's most common languages — never gets flagged, due to inadequate data. And while misinformation efforts are ramped up around national election time, Facebook's continuous lack of resources in the country fails to more permanently fight dangerous bots and violent groups.
The issues are largest in India, but similar resource problems plague countries like Myanmar, where Facebook's efforts to stem harmful rhetoric weren't enough, and may have helped inflame a coup. While the company did enforce measures during Myanmar's elections to limit the visibility of misinformation posts shared by the military, it couldn't keep it up afterwards. Facebook rolled back its measures in the end, and three months later, the military carried out a violent coup.
SEE ALSO: Facebook's defense during whistleblower hearing falls apart in real timeWhile Facebook clearly recognizes its role in foreign political violence and does try to rectify it, these documents show that it's often too little, too late. If the company is to ethically operate on a global stage, it owes its largest market — and all other markets — the cultural sensitivity and dedication of resources to safely serve its users. While a U.S.-based company should absolutely address its own country's misinformation issues, Facebook needs to reexamine how it dedicates its time to misinformation across the globe.
Katie Harbath, former director of public policy at Facebook, told the Timesthat her ex-employer needs to find a solution that can be applied around the world. "There is definitely a question about resourcing," said Harbath. "[but the answer is not] just throwing more money at the problem."
Topics Facebook Social Media
Google Assistant finally lets you book Uber, Lyft ridesTim Cook to host fundraiser for Hillary Clinton'Doctor Who' history made: Jodie Whittaker aces American debutSex robot brothel banned from opening in HoustonTwitter comes up with a stream of titles for #DonaldTrumpTheMovieDonald Trump's ongoing fight with the family of a slain Muslim soldierMicrosoft pulls latest Windows 10 update after users' files disappearDraymond Green apologizes for accidentally posting his junk on SnapchatDublin pub takes the piss out of Donald Trump, literally'American Horror Story: Apocalypse' and Harry Potter have a lot in commonPhotojournalist documents fearsome cat fights on Downing StreetThe LG Watch W7 is a smartwatch with classic mechanical handsDwayne Johnson posts first peek at 'Hobbs and Shaw' with Jason StathamJ.K. Rowling dashes hopes for a ninth Harry Potter book: 'Harry is done now'Facebook, Apple confirm they were targets of Supermicro malware attackChelsea Peretti tweets some bad news for 'Brooklyn 99' fansZika cases prompt CDC to issue a 1Kobo Forma is a durable, larger take on Kindle OasisFacebook employees revolt after executive appears at Kavanaugh hearingZika cases prompt CDC to issue a 1 Amazon reportedly considered rebranding IMDb TV as 'Zon' The best new FaceTime features on iOS 15 YouTube shooting became a Twitter monster because of trolling, not fake news Casey Neistat shares heartfelt video on YouTube shooting Peter Crouch's response to Ronaldo's bicycle kick has gone viral Thousands petition to change Singapore's film rating for 'Love, Simon' Woman refuses to snitch on her new buddy: Marvin the 7 Jim Carrey submits highly accurate Trump portrait to the Smithsonian We can't ignore the role mental health plays in conspiracy theory beliefs Officials think they've cracked the LA 'jetpack man' mystery Social media fills with footage from Astroworld tragedy. Some of it helps. YouTube will no longer show 'dislike' counts on videos Prince Harry gets the meme treatment, is officially internet royalty This remix of that viral Walmart kid yodeling is astonishingly catchy Muslim leaders fight 'Punish a Muslim' day with #LoveAMuslim How Marvel's 'Eternals' got their mythic names Hundreds gather to pay their respects at Stephen Hawking's funeral Discord users are revolting over NFTs and crypto. Platforms should heed this warning. 'King of the Hill' co Robinhood data breach exposes 7 million users' personal information
1.9197s , 10133.765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Dear Utol (2025): My Bilmoko GF Episode 34】,New Knowledge Information Network