Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.
Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.
Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.
Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.
Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.
Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.
Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.
Facebook has launched a review of how it handles violent videos and other objectionable material, saying it needed to do better after the Cleveland killing video remained on its website and mobile app for two hours.
Facebook says it will be looking for ways to make it easier for people to report such videos and to speed up the process of reviewing items once they are reported.
It relies largely on its 1.9 billion users to report items that violate its terms of service.
An official said millions of items are reported each week in more than 40 languages and thousands of workers review them.