Friday, 15 Nov 2024

Facebook apologises after AI puts 'primates' label on video of black men

CALIFORNIA (NYTIMES) – Facebook users who recently watched a video from a British tabloid featuring Black men saw an automated prompt from the social network that asked if they would like to “keep seeing videos about Primates,” causing the company to investigate and disable the artificial intelligence-powered feature that pushed the message.

Facebook on Friday (Sept 3) apologised for what it called “an unacceptable error” and said it was looking into the recommendation feature to “prevent this from happening again.”

The video, dated June 27, 2020, was by The Daily Mail and featured clips of Black men in altercations with white civilians and police officers. It had no connection to monkeys or primates.

Darci Groves, a former content design manager at the social network, said a friend had recently sent her a screenshot of the prompt. She then posted it to a product feedback forum for current and former Facebook employees.

In response, a product manager for Facebook Watch, the company’s video service, called it “unacceptable” and said the company was “looking into the root cause.” Ms Groves said the prompt was “horrifying and egregious.”

Dani Lever, a Facebook spokesperson, said in a statement: “As we have said, while we have made improvements to our AI, we know it’s not perfect, and we have more progress to make. We apologise to anyone who may have seen these offensive recommendations.”

Google, Amazon and other technology companies have been under scrutiny for years for biases within their AI systems, particularly around issues of race.

Studies have shown that facial recognition technology is biased against people of colour and has more trouble identifying them, leading to incidents where Black people have been discriminated against or arrested because of computer error.

In one example in 2015, Google Photos mistakenly labeled pictures of Black people as “gorillas,” for which the search giant said it was “genuinely sorry” and would work to fix the issue immediately.

More than two years later, Wired found that Google’s solution was to censor the word “gorilla” from searches, while also blocking “chimp,” “chimpanzee” and “monkey.”

Facebook has one of the world’s largest repositories of user-uploaded images on which to train its facial- and object-recognition algorithms.

The company, which tailors content to users based on their past browsing and viewing habits, sometimes asks people if they would like to continue seeing posts under related categories.

It was unclear whether messages like the “primates” one were widespread.

Facebook and Instagram, its photo-sharing app, have struggled with other issues related to race.

After July’s European Championship in soccer, for instance, three Black members of England’s national soccer team were racially abused on the social network for missing penalty kicks in the championship game.

Racial issues have also caused internal strife at Facebook. In 2016, CEO Mark Zuckerberg asked employees to stop crossing out the phrase “Black Lives Matter” and replacing it with “All Lives Matter” in a communal space in the company’s Menlo Park, California, headquarters.

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Hundreds of employees also staged a virtual walkout last year to protest the company’s handling of a post from President Donald Trump about the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

The company later hired a vice president of civil rights and released a civil rights audit. In an annual diversity report in July, Facebook said 4.4 per cent of its US-based employees were Black, up from 3.9 per cent the year before.

Ms Groves, who left Facebook over the summer after four years, said that there have been a series of missteps at the company that suggest its leaders aren’t prioritising ways to deal with racial problems.

“Facebook can’t keep making these mistakes and then saying, ‘I’m sorry,'” she said.

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