"Hate speech — I'm optimistic that over a five, 10-year period we will have AI tools that get into some of the nuances, the linguistic nuances, of different types of content to be more accurate in flagging things for our systems," he said this month. "But today we're just not there on that, so a lot of this is still reactive. People flag it to us, we have people look at it, we have policies to try and make it as not subjective as possible, but until we get it more automated there's a higher error rate than I'm happy with."
Facebook hate speech, censorship policies upset both sides →