Technology
Facebook tightens policies to prevent suicide, self-harm
San Francisco, Sep 11
On World Suicide Prevention Day, Facebook is tightening its policies around self-harm, suicide and eating disorder and has announced its plan to hire a health and well-being expert to join its safety policy team.
"Earlier this year, we began hosting regular consultations with experts from around the world to discuss some of the more difficult topics associated with suicide and self-injury. These include how we deal with suicide notes, the risks of sad content online and newsworthy depiction of suicide," Antigone Davis, Global Head of Safety, Facebook, wrote in a blog post on Tuesday.
The social media giant has been working on suicide prevention measures since a few years now and in 2017, it introduced its artificial intelligence (AI)-based suicide prevention tools.
"...We've made several changes to improve how we handle this content. We tightened our policy around self-harm to no longer allow graphic cutting images to avoid unintentionally promoting or triggering self-harm, even when someone is seeking support or expressing themselves to aid their recovery," Davis added.
Facebook-owned Instagram stared hiding self-harm images behind "sensitivity screens" this year.
The photo-sharing platform also prevents self-harm content from appearing in its "Explore" tab and it has taken steps to prohibit content that may promote eating disorders.
"Earlier this year, we began hosting regular consultations with experts from around the world to discuss some of the more difficult topics associated with suicide and self-injury. These include how we deal with suicide notes, the risks of sad content online and newsworthy depiction of suicide," Antigone Davis, Global Head of Safety, Facebook, wrote in a blog post on Tuesday.
The social media giant has been working on suicide prevention measures since a few years now and in 2017, it introduced its artificial intelligence (AI)-based suicide prevention tools.
"...We've made several changes to improve how we handle this content. We tightened our policy around self-harm to no longer allow graphic cutting images to avoid unintentionally promoting or triggering self-harm, even when someone is seeking support or expressing themselves to aid their recovery," Davis added.
Facebook-owned Instagram stared hiding self-harm images behind "sensitivity screens" this year.
The photo-sharing platform also prevents self-harm content from appearing in its "Explore" tab and it has taken steps to prohibit content that may promote eating disorders.
5 minutes ago
Rahul, Priyanka target NDA over Pappu Yadav’s arrest, allege systemic collusion in NEET aspirant death case
6 minutes ago
Twinkle Khanna indulges in a gluttony contest with hubby Akshay Kumar
7 minutes ago
Sanya Malhotra promises to represent women more honestly as 'Mrs' clocks 1 year
8 minutes ago
Amitabh Bachchan calls India ‘first world’ after U-19 Men’s WC triumph
8 minutes ago
Priyanka Chopra celebrates brother Siddharth, Neelam Upadhyaya’s first wedding anniversary
9 minutes ago
Huma Qureshi has an ‘evening full of love’ with her ‘forever icon’ Rekha
10 minutes ago
Kareena Kapoor shares ‘LOC Kargil’ scene with Saif Ali Khan, says ‘Little did we know’
12 minutes ago
Rajinikanth, Kamal Haasan film's promo shoot to begin from Saturday
13 minutes ago
Margot Robbie’s skin influenced ‘Wuthering Heights’ set design
14 minutes ago
Sara Arjun: ‘Euphoria’ found me at a time when nothing felt certain
14 minutes ago
‘Ghooskhor Pandat’ row: FWICE writes to OTT platforms, asks producer to withdraw the title of Manoj Bajpayee-starrer film
29 minutes ago
US senators call for a probe into Elon Musk-led SpaceX for potential Chinese links
29 minutes ago
Indian markets rebound this week over India-US trade deal, RBI MPC decisions
