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AMD to invest $400 million in India by 2028: Here’s what we know

US chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices said on Friday it will invest around $400 million in India over the next five years and will build its largest design center in the tech hub of Bengaluru. AMD’s announcement was made by its Chief Technology Officer Mark Papermaster at an annual semiconductor conference that started Friday in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state of Gujarat. Other speakers at the flagship event include Foxconn Chairman Young Liu and Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra. Despite being a late entrant, the Modi government has been courting investments into India’s nascent chip sector to establish its credentials as a chipmaking hub. AMD said it will open its new design centre campus in Bengaluru by end of this year and create 3,000 new engineering roles within five years. “Our India teams will continue to play a pivotal role in delivering the high-performance and adaptive solutions that support AMD customers worldwide,” Papermaster said. The new 500,000-square-foot (55,5...

Hate speech drops by almost half on Facebook, claims company

Facebook is often witnessed sharing the humble (cough! tricky) ideas on free speech and ‘pluralistic debate.’ But despite such good intentions the social media company is more so than ever dragged into the courts for its ‘false deceptive conduct.’

While the Zuckerberg-backed company is snubbed by media reports over its inability to tackle hate speech, Facebook has now claimed that the prevalence of hate speech on its platform has dropped by almost 50 percent in the last three quarters.

The claim came in response to a report in The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) on Sunday, which said that Facebook’s content moderators are not consistently successful at removing objectionable content using Artificial Intelligence (AI).

In a reply, Guy Rosen, Vice-President of Integrity at Facebook, said that their technology is having a big impact on reducing how much hate speech people see on Facebook.

“According to our latest Community Standards Enforcement report, its prevalence is about 0.05 percent of content viewed or about five views per every 10,000, down by almost 50 percent in the last three quarters,” he added.

“Data pulled from leaked documents is being used to create a narrative that the technology we use to fight hate speech is inadequate and that we deliberately misrepresent our progress. This is not true,” Rosen said.

The WSJ report claimed that internal documents show that two years ago, Facebook reduced the time that human reviewers focused on hate speech complaints, and made other adjustments that reduced the number of complaints.

“That, in turn, helped create the appearance that Facebook’s AI had been more successful in enforcing the company’s rules than it actually was,” the report said.

Rosen said in a blog post that focusing just on content removals is the wrong way to look at how we fight hate speech.

“We need to be confident that something is hate speech before we remove it. If something might be hate speech but we’re not confident enough that it meets the bar for removal, our technology may reduce the content’s distribution or won’t recommend groups, pages or people that regularly post content that is likely to violate our policies,” he noted.

Facebook said when it began reporting metrics on hate speech, only 23.6 percent of content it removed was detected proactively by its systems; the majority of what it removed was found by people.

“Now that number is more than 97 percent. But our proactive rate doesn’t tell us what we are missing and doesn’t account for the sum of our efforts, including what we do to reduce the distribution of problematic content,” the Facebook executive said.

(With IANS inputs)

The post Hate speech drops by almost half on Facebook, claims company appeared first on BGR India.



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