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Search resuls for: "Elena Hernandez"


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And what I was doing on social media connected with a lot of people,'' Mangaldas said. "It's affecting operations, it's affecting visibility, it's affecting impact to a much greater extent than what we can deal with,'' she told CNN. We also changed our graphics to be a little more abstract since flagging algorithms don't categorize those as nudity," Sharma told CNN. Getting content unblocked is hit or miss, multiple content creators told CNN, adding they rarely got a human response to their appeals. Elena Hernandez, a spokesperson for YouTube said: "YouTube Health's mission is to increase equitable access to high-quality health content, and that includes sexual health.
Persons: Manomi, Leeza Mangaldas, Mangaldas, Tisha Gopalakrishnan, Gopalakrishnan, WFD, Roe, Wade, Meta, Niyati Sharma, Sharma, Elena Hernandez, we're, Natasha Vijayalaxmi, Vijayalaxmi, Nadja Organizations: CNN, YouTube, Facebook, United Nations, UN Population Fund, UNFPA, UNESCO, Meta, Amnesty International, Amnesty, Nadja Media, Suno Locations: Kerala, Instagram, India, Asia, Pacific, Goa, South, Southeast Asia, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Chennai, Suno India
CNN —A slew of viral conspiracy videos on social media have made baseless claims that the Maui wildfires were started intentionally as part of a land grab, highlighting how quickly misinformation spreads after a disaster. Still, conspiracy theories continue to circulate as nearly 400 people are still unaccounted for. It’s not uncommon for conspiracy theories to make the rounds after a national crisis. Social media platform X did not immediately respond to a request for comment. That means posts sharing conspiracy theories that spark fear and emotion may perform better in a crisis than those sharing straightforward, accurate information.
Persons: hasn’t, Hurricane Dora, It’s, Renee DiResta, ” DiResta, , , TikTok, Elena Hernandez, ” Hernandez, Instagram, Michael Inouye, ” Inouye Organizations: CNN, Electric, Stanford University, SpaceX, YouTube, ABI Research Locations: Maui —, Maui, Hurricane, , California, Hawaii
A new study on YouTube's recommendation algorithm found it pushed violent videos to children. Researchers from the Tech Transparency Project created four accounts for fictional nine and 14-year-olds. Accounts that watched recommended videos received hundreds more violent videos than the ones that didn't. For the following month, researchers tracked hundreds of videos recommended daily to the fictional children on YouTube's homepage. One of each pair of the accounts chose to watch at least 50 of the recommended videos, while the other accounts did not interact with the violent recommendations.
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