Mark Zuckerberg has repeatedly said that live video is classic xxx movies - watch full movies for freethe future of Facebook, but what if that future is terrifying and full of violence?
What happens when one of the largest proponents of live video struggles to manage its darker side?
Reports that the sexual assault of a 15-year-old girl was broadcast on Facebook Live and watched by upwards of 40 people earlier this week have rightfully shocked many, and brought to mind a similarly disturbing incident from earlier in the year.
Individuals posting about acts of violence on the social media platform is nothing new, but since the launch of Facebook Live, the company has faced a particularly difficult challenge: How to best respond to violence on the site when it's happening in real time.
And if Zuckerberg is correct in his predictions, the scale of the problem is only going to get worse.
SEE ALSO: Chilling Facebook Live video captures shooting death in Chicago"Most of the content 10 years ago was text, and then photos, and now it’s quickly becoming videos," he noted at the 2016 Mobile World Congress. "I just think that we’re going to be in a world a few years from now where the vast majority of the content that people consume online will be video."
With live video charging ahead, how can Facebook identify and stop those who would abuse its streaming service?
Mashablereached out to Facebook directly about this week's sexual assault and its plan to prevent people from livestreaming acts of violence in the future.
The company's response reiterated its established position on the matter.
“This is a hideous crime and we do not allow this kind of content on Facebook," wrote a Facebook spokesperson. "We take our responsibility to keep people safe on Facebook very seriously and will remove videos that depict sexual assault and are shared to glorify violence.”
Videos aren't the only thing that can be removed — individuals can be banned from the service for posting violent videos that violate its "Community Standards."
This is not the first time we've heard this from Facebook, as past incidents have forced the social media giant to detail how it handles violent streaming content.
SEE ALSO: A Facebook Live video of torture stayed up for 30 minutes. Why?"We have a team on-call 24 hours a day, seven days a week, dedicated to responding to these reports immediately," the company stated in a press release from July of last year. "The rules for live video are the same for all the rest of our content. A reviewer can interrupt a live stream if there is a violation of our Community Standards."
Essentially, Facebook relies on people seeing a troubling stream and reporting it to the company — "it only takes one report for something to be reviewed," the release continued.
Once an offending video has been identified as violating the company's community standards, it can be removed. However, while that can happen during the initial stream, it also may occur only well after the video has gained notoriety and been viewed by many people.
That's clearly a problem. It's estimated that hundreds of hours of video is uploaded to YouTube every minute. If Facebook Live reaches the ubiquity clearly hoped for by Zuckerberg, one imagines an internal Facebook team would run into significant obstacles in properly vetting flagged content.
Facebook is in a tough spot. The company doesn't want its product used to promote violence, but clearly can't keep every single incident from slipping through the cracks.
One imagines that a feature like Google's Cloud Video Intelligence API, which allows for the searching of specific objects within a group of videos, could at some point be adapted to screen videos for violence. This would certainly help ease the burden on Facebook's on-call team.
But even if that magical tech solution swoops in to save the day, computers have a hard time with context. The traumatic aftermath of the police shooting of Philando Castile, for example? Facebook likely determined that the video attempted to call attention to violence — not glorify it — and as such it remained on the site.
With no easy monitoring solution in sight, and Zuckerberg's ambition to grow Live so fundamental to the company, violent videos will likely keep showing up on Facebook. What that means for the service and its 1.23 billion users is unclear, but it does suggest that the future of Facebook could be darker than its founder hoped.
Topics Facebook
Previous:The Past is a Foreign Agent
Next:Foul Shot
iFLYTEK launches Spark Multilingual Model and Spark 4.0 Turbo · TechNodeEurope will launch a spacecraft to Jupiter. Here's how to watch.Australia vs. Bangladesh 2024 livestream: Watch T20 World Cup for freeWebb telescope just started peering at the fascinating TRAPPIST planetsStunning James Webb Space Telescope photo shows bending of spacetimeVolkswagen may close Chinese joint plant · TechNodeNASA spacecraft snaps photos of the most mysterious asteroidsBest TV deal: Get the Fire TV 50See the new NASA spacesuits Artemis III astronauts will wear on the mooniFLYTEK launches Spark Multilingual Model and Spark 4.0 Turbo · TechNodeAir purifier deals: Save 20% on Coway and Dyson purifiersHow to clean your laptop screenByteDance releases Ola Friend, its first AI smart earbuds · TechNode5 planets will light the sky in rare astronomical event this weekGoogle launches citizen science project to help protect coral reefsChina’s BYD partners with Black Myth: Wukong to digitalize heritage sites · TechNodeNASA spacecraft's new images of volcanic world Io are tantalizingPoland vs. Austria 2024 livestream: Watch Euro 2024 for freeArgentina vs. Canada 2024 livestream: Watch Copa America for freeTikTok says U.S. ban violates the First Amendment right to free speech Trendsetters teach us how to pose for show 14 times footballers were unintentionally hilarious on Twitter Everything coming to HBO Now in November 2019 Another Trump diss gets some beautiful merch Apple responds to people's tweets with entire commercials Bill Maher doesn't understand how Milo Yiannopoulos works Microsoft, not Amazon, wins $10 billion contract from the Pentagon Justin Trudeau and Angela Merkel had a candlelit dinner and I am fine with that Apple's iPhone SE 2 will come in March, analyst claims New Xiaomi phone will have a 108 Jack Dorsey trashes Facebook's Libra, say it's not even a cryptocurrency Beautiful photo strips capture the moment a man finds out he's going to be a dad 7 of the best tech gifts you can find for around $20 'BoJack Horseman' fans are getting pretty frustrated by this 1 thing Can Facebook's News tab fix the problems News Feed created? 'Silicon Valley' reaches the beginning of the end in Season 6: Review Tesla unveils next Watch the crowd at the World Series chomp in rhythm to 'Baby Shark' Ryan Reynolds went full Deadpool to congratulate 'Joker' Lyft Pink is the ride
2.446s , 10130.7578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【classic xxx movies - watch full movies for free】,Miracle Information Network