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Mir sets pace on Sepang day two, Yamaha absent
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Xi, Putin hail 'stabilising' China-Russia alliance
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GSK boosted by specialty drugs, end to Zantac fallout
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UK's ex-prince leaves Windsor home amid Epstein storm: reports
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Sky is the limit for Ireland fly-half Prendergast, says captain Doris
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Feyi-Waboso reminds England great Robinson of himself
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Starmer faces MPs as pressure grows over Mandelson scandal
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HRW urges pushback against 'aggressive superpowers'
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Russia demands Ukraine give in as UAE talks open
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Gaza civil defence says 17 killed in strikes after Israel says shots wounded officer
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France's Kante joins Fenerbahce after Erdogan 'support'
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CK Hutchison launches arbitration over Panama Canal port ruling
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Stocks mostly rise as traders ignore AI-fuelled sell-off on Wall St
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Acclaimed Iraqi film explores Saddam Hussein's absurd birthday rituals
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On rare earth supply, Trump for once seeks allies
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Ukrainian chasing sumo greatness after meteoric rise
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Draper to make long-awaited return in Davis Cup qualifier
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Can Ilia Malinin fulfil his promise at the Winter Olympics?
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CK Hutchison begins arbitration against Panama over annulled canal contract
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UNESCO recognition inspires hope in Afghan artist's city
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Ukraine, Russia, US negotiators gather in Abu Dhabi for war talks
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WTO must 'reform or die': talks facilitator
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Doctors hope UK archive can solve under-50s bowel cancer mystery
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Stocks swing following latest AI-fuelled sell-off on Wall St
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Demanding Dupont set to fire France in Ireland opener
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Britain's ex-prince Andrew leaves Windsor home: BBC
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Coach plots first South Africa World Cup win after Test triumph
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Spin-heavy Pakistan hit form, but India boycott risks early T20 exit
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Japan eyes Premier League parity by aligning calendar with Europe
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Whack-a-mole: US academic fights to purge his AI deepfakes
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Love in a time of war for journalist and activist in new documentary
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'Unprecedented mass killing': NGOs battle to quantify Iran crackdown scale
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Seahawks kid Cooper Kupp seeks new Super Bowl memories
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Thousands of Venezuelans march to demand Maduro's release
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AI, manipulated images falsely link some US politicians with Epstein
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Move on, says Trump as Epstein files trigger probe into British politician
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Arteta backs Arsenal to build on 'magical' place in League Cup final
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Evil Empire to underdogs: Patriots eye 7th Super Bowl
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UBS grilled on Capitol Hill over Nazi-era probe
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Guardiola 'hurt' by suffering caused in global conflicts
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Marseille do their work early to beat Rennes in French Cup
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Trump signs spending bill ending US government shutdown
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Arsenal sink Chelsea to reach League Cup final
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Leverkusen sink St Pauli to book spot in German Cup semis
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'We just need something positive' - Monks' peace walk across US draws large crowds
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Milan close gap on Inter with 3-0 win over Bologna
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No US immigration agents at Super Bowl: security chief
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NASA Moon mission launch delayed to March after test
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Spain to seek social media ban for under-16s
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LIV Golf events to receive world ranking points: official
Facebook 'supreme court' admits 'frustrations' in 5 years of work
An oversight board created by Facebook to review content-moderation decisions trumpeted improved transparency and respect for people's rights in a survey of their first five years of work on Thursday, while acknowledging "frustrations" to their arm's-length role.
Facebook -- since renamed Meta -- announced the Oversight Board, often referred to as the group's "supreme court", at a 2018 nadir of public trust in the tech giant.
The Instagram and WhatsApp owner's image had been tarnished by episodes like the Cambridge Analytica data-breach scandal and dis- and misinformation around crucial public votes such as Brexit and the 2016 US presidential election.
The Oversight Board began its work in 2020, staffed with prominent academics, media veterans and civil society figures.
It reviews selected cases where people have appealed against Meta's moderation decisions, issuing binding rulings on whether the company was right to remove content or leave it in place.
It also issues non-binding recommendations on how lessons from those cases should be applied to updating the rules for billions of users on Meta's Facebook, Instagram and Threads platforms.
Over the past five years, the board has secured "more transparency, accountability, open exchange and respect for free expression and other human rights on Meta's platforms", it said in a report.
The board added that Meta's oversight model -- unusual among major social networks -- could be "a framework for other platforms to follow".
The board, which is funded by Meta, has legal commitments that bosses will implement its decisions on individual pieces of content.
But the company is free to disregard its broader recommendations on moderation policy.
"Over the last five years, we have had frustrations and moments when hoped-for impact did not materialize," the board wrote.
- 'Systemic changes' -
Some outside observers of the tech giant are more critical.
"If you look at the way that content moderation has changed on Meta platforms since the establishment of the board, it's rather gotten worse," said Jan Penfrat of Brussels-based campaigning organisation European Digital Rights (EDRi).
Today on Facebook or Instagram, "there is less moderation happening, all under the guise of the protection of free speech," he added.
Effective oversight of moderation for hundreds of millions of users "would have to be a lot bigger and a lot faster", with "the power to actually make systemic changes to the way Meta's platforms work", Penfrat said.
One major outstanding issue is chief executive Mark Zuckerberg's surprise decision in January to axe Meta's US fact-checking programme.
That scheme had employed third-party fact checkers, AFP among them, to expose misinformation disseminated on the platform.
In April, the Oversight Board said the decision to replace it with a system based on user-generated fact-checks had been made "hastily".
Its recommendation from that time for "continuous assessments of the effectiveness" of the new system is currently marked as "in progress" on the company's website.
Last month, the Oversight Board said it would fulfil Meta's request for its advice on expanding worldwide the so-called "Community Notes" programme.
The company said it needed help "establishing fundamental guiding principles" for rolling out the scheme and identifying countries where it might not be appropriate, for example due to limits on freedom of expression.
- AI decisions looming -
Looking ahead, "the Board will be widening its focus to consider in greater detail the responsible deployment of AI tools and products," the report said.
Zuckerberg has talked up plans for deeper integration of generative artificial intelligence into Meta's products, calling it a potential palliative to Western societies' loneliness epidemic.
But 2025 has also seen mounting concern over the technology, including a spate of stories of people killing themselves after extended conversations with AI chatbots.
Many such "newly emerging harms... mirror harms the Board has addressed in the context of social media", the Oversight Board said, adding that it would work towards "a way forward with a global, user rights-based perspective".
L.E.Campos--PC