Have you ever wondered who takes on the grueling, unforgiving task of combing Facebook's groups and personal profiles for terrorist activity? Meet Community Operations workers, who are often paid low wages for highly specialized and difficult work. And now, the job has become even less appealing: It turns out that a bug inadvertently exposed the personal Facebook profiles of those moderating these violent graphic images to terrorists.
The moderators were alerted that something was going on when they started receiving friend requests on their personal accounts from the very people and organizations they were investigating. Facebook's security team later learned that a bug had revealed the moderators' Facebook profiles within the activity logs of the groups they were looking into and shutting down.
Facebook's reaction was to put together a "task force of data scientists, community operations and security investigators," according to internal emails obtained by The Guardian. However, the bug remained in place for two weeks after it was discovered, even as Facebook's head of global investigations, Craig d'Souza, was reassuring moderators that it was unlikely the terrorists would connect these personal profiles to moderation activities.
One moderator, though, wasn't willing to take a chance. He fled Ireland, where
https://www.engadget.com/2017/06/16/facebook-moderators-profiles-te...
You need to be a member of 12160 Social Network to add comments!
Join 12160 Social Network