Laut australischen Gesundheitsexperten informieren Social-Media-Beiträge die Öffentlichkeit über die Entfernung illegaler Drogen durch Meta

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-04-07/meta-censoring-posts-about-illicit-drugs-advocates-say/106537316?utm_source=abc_news_app&utm_medium=content_shared&utm_campaign=abc_news_app&utm_content=link

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    3 Kommentare

    1. EmbarrassedHelp on

      > The organisations affected are also calling on the e-Safety Commissioner to intervene and „compel“ Meta to „restore all accounts and content of member organisations that have been removed or suspended on the basis of drug-related community standards violations“.

      The eSafety Commissioner is probably responsible for the content being removed in the first place. Why would she want to intervene to protect content that she wants removed?

    2. 504LaissezLeBonTemp on

      Big Pharma probably wants the public to stay uninformed 🤷‍♂️

    3. *“This is health information, but unfortunately, the transition from a human-mediated system to an AI-mediated system means that it just gets pinged and pulled,“ Dr Caldicott said.*

      Unsurprisingly, it’s simply yet another common example of social media companies using fully automated systems to filter and censor posted content with no humans in the loop, so the context and actual content of the post doesn’t matter if the system thinks it concerns any of the (secret) forbidden topics.

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