Social network Facebook is testing a model based on artificial intelligence (AI) to identify negative
Facebook will introduce several new softwaretools to help more than 70 million people who lead and moderate groups on this platform. Facebook, which has 2.85 billion monthly users, said at the end of last year that more than 1.8 billion people are active monthly in groups, and there are tens of millions of active groups on the platform in total.
Along with new Facebook tools,artificial intelligence will decide when to send "conflict warnings" to those who lead the groups. Alerts will be sent to administrators if the AI determines that a conversation in their group is “controversial or unhealthy,” the company said.

Facebook has developed an algorithm to detect deepfakes
For many years, technology platformsrelied more and more on artificial intelligence to identify most of the content on the internet. Scientists note that this tool can be useful if there is so much information on the site that live moderators cannot track all of it.
But AI can be wrong when it comes to the intricacies of communication and context. The methods that work in AI-based moderation systems are also not advertised.
A Facebook spokesperson noted that the company's AIwill use several signals to determine when to send a conflict alert, including comment response time and post comment length. Some administrators have already set up keyword alerts, which can identify topics that could lead to offensive comments, he said.
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