Today, creating deepfake videos is no longer exclusive to Hollywood studios. Deepfake images and videos are likely to cause unethical issues that concern many of us but they are not losing popularity in recent years.
If we limit what information people have access to and what they can say then we have no democracy at all," he wrote.Deepfake is a creepy world in which people are talking about replacing faces of a subject with those of film stars or politicians. "If we change the outcomes without winning the minds of the people who will be ruled, then we have a democracy in name only. Bosworth said these policies "very well may lead" to Trump's re-election, but that Facebook should not use "tools available to us to change the outcome". Bosworth, who is not a Trump fan, said Trump "just did unbelievable work" in the 2016 campaign and defended Facebook's decision to maintain the same ad policies.įacebook has been criticized for allowing lies in political ads. SEE: Fake reviews: Facebook and eBay ban dozens of groups after watchdog probeīickert gave her testimony days after an internal memo from top Facebook exec Andrew Bosworth was published in the New York Times. However, I think we have made huge strides and I think that is shown by the dramatic increase in the number of networks that we've removed," said Bickert, after explaining Facebook had taken down 50 networks in 2019 compared with just one in 2016. Soto asked Bickert whether Facebook could still be used by third parties to mobilize people to attend a fake political rally like the fake Trump rally that Russian operatives organized in 2016 in Florida.
You click through it and you see information from the fact-checking source." "We now have the label for something that has been rated false, you have to click through it so it actually obscures the image and it says 'false information' and it says this has been rated 'false' by fact-checkers. "We think we could have gotten that to fact-checkers faster and we think the label that we put on it could have been more clear," she added. "It was labeled false at the time," said Bickert.
"Our approach is to give people more information so that if something is going to be in the public discourse they will know how to assess it, how to contextualize it," said Bickert.īickert noted that the Pelosi video was labeled false at the time but she admitted Facebook was too slow to have it parsed by fact-checkers who decide whether a video should be given a 'false' tag. Lawmakers directed questions about Facebook's inability to handle misinformation at Monika Bickert, Facebook's vice president of global policy management, who testified at the hearing.Īsked by Florida Democrat congressman Darren Soto why Facebook wouldn't simply just remove the fake Pelosi video, Bickert said Facebook wanted to give users a way of "contextualizing" such videos using 'false information' labels. "I am concerned that Facebook's latest effort to tackle misinformation leaves a lot out," she said.
SEE: A winning strategy for cybersecurity (ZDNet special report) | Download the report as a PDF (TechRepublic)Īt yesterday's hearing held by the House Energy & Commerce subcommittee, chairwoman of the subcommittee Jan Schkowsky said there is growing evidence that tech firms have failed to self-regulate, Reuters reports. However, Facebook's criteria still allows for the manipulated video of Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appearing to slur during a speech last year, but didn't change what the politician said.