SOCIAL
Meta beskriver åtgärder för att skydda användare från övergrepp under fotbolls-VM

With the 2022 World Cup set to kick-off next week, Meta’s looking to get ahead of potential misuse, by outlining the various tools that it has in place to protect players from attacks in its apps, while it’s also issued a warning to those using its platforms that abusive behavior will not be tolerated.
This comes after England’s loss in the Euro 2020 final, which resulted in several English players being targeted, largely via Instagram DMs, with racial abuse.
The incident sparked international condemnation, and prompted Meta, and other platforms, to implement a range of new tools to offer more protection for users from DM attacks.
Now, Meta’s looking to reiterate these tools to help players, and fans, as we head into the World Cup frenzy.
Enligt Meta:
"We have clear rules against bullying, violent threats and hate speech — and we don’t want it on our apps. As well as responding to reports from our community, outside of private messages we also use technology to proactively look for content that might break these rules. Where our technology thinks a piece of content may be violating it will take action, whether that’s sending it to our teams for review or – if it’s really confident – deleting it automatically.”
Meta says that this type of proactive enforcement has had a big impact, with more than 17 million examples of hate speech removed from its apps between April and June this year, and more than 90% of that taken down before anybody reported it.
To further assist, Meta has outlined its updated range of IG protection and control tools, including the capacity to turn off DM requests completely, and choose who can/can’t comment on your posts.
There’s also Instagram’s ‘Hidden Words’ option, which enables users to filter out comments, Story replies and DM requests that contain potentially offensive words, phrases and emojis (moving them to a separate folder).
“Since launching Hidden Words last year, more than one in five people with more than 10,000 followers have turned it on. We’re also testing turning it on by default for people with creator accounts, which includes many footballers playing in the World Cup.”
Instagram also has its new ‘Limits’ feature, which hides comments and DM requests from people who don’t follow you or who only followed you recently.
“Limits is particularly useful for public figures who experience sudden spikes of comments and DMs – after a football game, for example – as our research shows that most negativity towards them comes from non-followers or recent followers. When we detect that someone may be experiencing a rush of comments or DM requests, we’ll prompt them to turn on Limits.”

Finally, Instagram also has comment detection, which will prompt users that are trying to post a comment that might be offensive.

“In a given week, people edit or delete their comment 50% of the time after seeing these warnings. We also recently introduced new nudges that encourage people to pause and rethink before replying to a potentially offensive comment. These nudges are live now for people whose apps are set to English, Portuguese, Spanish, French, Chinese or Arabic.”
In combination, these features should help Instagram users avoid the same types of abuse that some have experienced in the past, while also limiting overall negative behavior, and improving the user experience.
These are important steps, and it’s also crucially important that Instagram, and all social apps, step up and note unacceptable behavior, especially in high-profile instances, where young sports stars can easily be overwhelmed by negativity.
The World Cup is an extremely passionate event, which can bring out the best and worst – and as such, it’s good to see Meta taking proactive steps to warn users on its rules and systems.
SOCIAL
7 Steps to Create Engaging Twitter Ads [Infographic]
![7 Steps to Create Engaging Twitter Ads [Infographic] 7 Steps to Create Engaging Twitter Ads [Infographic]](https://articles.entireweb.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/1686063024_7-Steps-to-Create-Engaging-Twitter-Ads-Infographic.png)
Are you considering investing in Twitter Ads for your business? There’s a lot changing at the app, which has seen some brands pull back their ad spend, but that could also present new opportunities, with lower competition for attention.
Want to learn the basics before getting started?
Teamet från Statusbrew share their Twitter Ads tips in this infographic.
De delar upp saker och ting enligt följande:
- Twitter Ads account
- Ads objectives
- Define campaign details
- Ad groups and bid type
- Inriktning
- Creative options
- Launch and monitor
Kolla in infografik för mer information.
En version av detta inlägg publicerades först på Röd webbdesignblogg.
SOCIAL
Kenya court orders suspension of mass layoff of Facebook moderators

Meta said it intends to appeal the ruling – Copyright AFP/File Lionel BONAVENTURE
A Kenyan court on Friday ordered the suspension of the mass sacking of scores of content moderators by a subcontractor for Facebook’s parent company Meta and directed the social media giant to provide counselling to the employees.
A total of 184 moderators employed in Nairobi by Sama, an outsourcing firm for Meta, filed a lawsuit in March, claiming their dismissal was “unlawful”.
In a 142-page ruling, labour court judge Byram Ongaya said Meta and Sama were “restrained from terminating the contracts” pending the determination of the lawsuit challenging the legality of the dismissal.
“An interim order is hereby issued that any contracts that were to lapse before the determination of the petition be extended” until the case is settled, the judge added.
Meta — which also owns Instagram and WhatsApp — was also ordered to “provide proper medical, psychiatric and psychological care for the petitioners and other Facebook content moderators”.
The company told the court of its intention to appeal the ruling.
The California-based tech behemoth has held that it has no official presence in the East African country and that the complainants are not employed by Meta.
It is facing two other legal cases in Kenya.
In 2022, a former South African employee of Sama, Daniel Motaung, filed a complaint in Kenya against Sama and Facebook claiming, among other things, poor working conditions and lack of mental health support.
The labour relations court in Nairobi declared in February it had the jurisdiction to try Motaung’s case. Meta has appealed the decision.
The social media giant is also facing another complaint in Kenya, where a local NGO and two Ethiopian citizens accused Meta of failing to act against online hate speech in Africa.
The complainants alleged this inaction resulted in the murder of a university professor in Ethiopia and called for the creation of a $1.6 billion fund to compensate the victims.
AFP is involved in a partnership with Meta providing fact-checking services in Asia-Pacific, Europe, the Middle East, Latin America and Africa.
SOCIAL
Företag som använder Twitter-verktyg för att hålla annonser borta från Musks Tweets: NYT

While Elon Musk claims that “almost all advertisers have come back to Twitter,” some still don’t want anything to do with the company’s CEO.
The New York Times, citing four people familiar with Twitter’s advertising situation, reported that certain brands that have returned to advertising on the platform are using Twitter’s adjacency controls to keep their content clear of increasingly troubling content — including Musk’s own tweets.
Jason Kint, chief executive of Digital Content Next, told the Times that Twitter is “unpredictable and chaotic” adding that, “Advertisers want to run in an environment where they are comfortable and can send a signal about their brand.”
Announced in December 2022, just a few months after Musk took control of the company, adjacency controls aimed to enable advertisers to prevent their ads from appearing adjacent to Tweets that use keywords they’d like to avoid.
“Empowering brands to customize their campaigns to prevent their ads from appearing adjacent to unsuitable content is an important step towards increased ad relevance on Twitter,” said an undated December blog post written by Engineering Lead Nina Chen and Head of Brand Safety AJ Brown.
Both Chen and Brown are no longer with the company. Neither immediately responded to Insider’s request for comment.
Insider previously reported that Brown attempted to counter the growing perception that Twitter wasn’t safe for brands with a later blogginlägg about the company’s partnerships with adtech companies DoubleVerify and IAS, which were meant to help with brand safety.
One individual at the company who seems unconcerned with brand safety is Musk himself.
He has deployed an array of bizarre tweets, from antisemitic conspiracy theories to anti-transgender content and anti-vaccine misinformation.
—Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 5, 2023
Citing a series of Musk tweets about financier George Soros, Ted Deutch, the chief executive of the American Jewish Committee, told the Times that “the lie Jews want to destroy civilization has led to the persecution of Jewish people for centuries.”
He added, “Musk should know better.”
Twitter responded to Insider’s request for comment with a poop emoji.
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