Meta starts testing facial recognition tools to combat âceleb-baitâ adverts


Meta is testing the use of facial recognition technology to help protect people from so-called âcelebrity baitâ adverts and to help users verify their identity and regain a compromised account.
The technology giant said the new schemes would be tested globally, but confirmed that they were not currently coming to the UK or the EU, but said it was âcontinuing to have conversations with regulatorsâ in both regions over the tools.
Under the new system, when Metaâs existing technologies spot a post it believes to be a scam and it contains an image of a public figure âat risk for celeb-baitâ, it will use facial recognition to compare faces in the ad against the public figureâs own Facebook and Instagram profile pictures.
We immediately delete any facial data generated from ads for this one-time comparison regardless of whether our system finds a match, and we donât use it for any other purpose
Meta
âIf we confirm a match and that the ad is a scam, weâll block it,â the company said.
âWe immediately delete any facial data generated from ads for this one-time comparison regardless of whether our system finds a match, and we donât use it for any other purpose.â
Meta said early testing of this scheme with a âsmall group of celebrities and public figuresâ had shown âpromising resultsâ when it came to âincreasing the speed and efficacyâ of spotting and removing scam ads of this kind.
It added that over the coming weeks, it would start alerting a larger group of figures who have been used in scam ads to let them know that they would be enrolled into the new scheme â and would allow them to opt out if they so wished.
Elsewhere, Meta said it was also now testing using facial recognition and video selfies as a means for people to verify their identity and regain access to an account that had been compromised.
The video would then be compared to the profile picture on the account the user was trying to access.
We want to help protect people and their accounts and while the adversarial nature of this space means we wonât always get it right, we believe that facial recognition technology can help us be faster, more accurate and more effective
Monika Bickert, Meta's vice president of content policy
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Monika Bickert, Metaâs vice president of content policy, said: âScammers are relentless and continuously evolve their tactics to try to evade detection.
âWeâre just as determined to stay ahead of them and will keep building and testing new technical defences to strengthen our detection and enforcement capabilities.
âWe have vetted these measures through our robust privacy and risk review process and built important safeguards, like sending notifications to educate people on how they work, giving people controls and ensuring we delete peopleâs facial data as soon as itâs no longer needed.
âWe want to help protect people and their accounts and while the adversarial nature of this space means we wonât always get it right, we believe that facial recognition technology can ââhelp us be faster, more accurate and more effective.
âWeâll continue to discuss our ongoing investments in this area with regulators, policymakers and other experts.â