Meta is launching the “Community Notes” era on its platforms

Meta, on Facebook, Instagram and Threads, according to the official statement made today. “Community Notes” period is starting.

X, formerly known as Twitter,Community Notes” Taking its feature as an example, Meta will start using a similar system on Facebook, Instagram and Threads. First, in the statement made about the new era that will begin in the USA, ““We found this approach worked in X.” The company said, now discontinuing third-party fact-checking program. About the subject, “Once the program is up and running, we will not write any community notes or decide which notes to show. These will be written and rated by contributing users“Meta made the statement: It will try to clarify the fake/fake posts/content on its platforms and basically prevent these contents from being distributed, with the results consisting of the common opinions of people with different perspectives.

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After this, Meta came to the fore with the penalties he received in Europe. As a reminder, the Irish Data Protection Committee (IDPC) He imposed a fine of 251 million euros. The reason for the penalty was a data breach on Facebook in 2018 (This breach affected 29 million users in total and 3 million in Europe.) is included. An Australian-based step was also taken today. Country, Cambridge Analytica A 50 million Australian dollar settlement with the company over the scandalin a compromise sentence” agreed. Before this, the company was fined 840 million dollars. The European Commission stated that Meta created unfair commercial conditions for other sales and advertising sites by integrating Facebook Marketplace directly into the Facebook platform, and that this step violated European Union antitrust rules. 797.72 million euros (approximately 840 million dollars) announced that the penalty was given.

Meta was previously fined 91 million euros for storing the passwords of Instagram and Facebook users in a plain text file. was sentenced. This serious penalty, imposed by the Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) based in Europe, came as a result of an investigation into a security breach in 2019. The following official statement was made regarding the penalty received by the company, which was revealed to have stored 600 million Facebook and Instagram passwords in plain text:

“The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) determined that Meta had breached various GDPR rules in connection with the breach. The Commission found that the company did not timely notify the DPC of a personal data breach related to the storage of user passwords in plain text and did not document personal data breaches related to the storage of user passwords in plain text. Meta also violated the GDPR by failing to use appropriate technical measures to ensure the security of users’ passwords against unauthorized operations.”

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