dead The company is using artificial intelligence to handle some tasks that help it build safer products and services, the company said on Tuesday (March 31). Blog post.
The company’s AI-powered risk review software enabled Meta to identify risks earlier, apply safeguards more consistently during product development and monitor results on an ongoing basis, according to the publication.
The risk review process includes identifying and mitigating potential privacy, safety and security concerns, as well as compliance with applicable legal requirements, across products and features for smartphones, computers and wearables, the publication said.
At Meta, AI now automates and improves parts of this process by pre-populating documentation, surfacing relevant product requirements, reducing time to ingestion, helping reviews move faster, and helping teams vet product proposals quickly, per post.
“Importantly, Risk Review’s AI development does not replace human judgment – it strengthens it.” Michel ProutyMeta’s chief product compliance and privacy officer wrote in this post.
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“Now, with the help of AI, people can spot patterns faster and identify things that might slip through the cracks. By combining AI’s efficiency and scalability with human nuance and expertise, we’re better protecting the billions of people who use our products and services every day.”
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This announcement comes on the heels of some other reports this month about how Meta is deploying AI across its operations.
It was reported on March 24 that Meta is the CTO Andrew Bosworth He will lead the company’s adoption efforts Artificial intelligence tools Throughout its workforce. Bosworth said in a mail On X, Meta has integrated AI tools across the organization and expects them to give employees more power to get their work done.
On March 23, it was reported that Meta was CEO Mark Zuckerberg He builds a “CEO Agent” to help him with his job. this I have an agent It helped Zuckerberg get information faster.
Meta said on March 19 that over the next few years it will shift content enforcement efforts on its apps from existing third-party vendors to new in-house vendors. Artificial intelligence systems. These systems will handle tasks such as frequent reviews of graphic content, while people will still play key roles in critical decisions.
On March 11, the company said it launched a new product AI-powered anti-fraud tools For its platforms WhatsApp, Facebook and Messenger. These tools are designed to help users spot and avoid scammers, Meta said.





