Meta

Our Commitment to Our Content Reviewers

By Justin Osofsky, VP of Global Operations

We know there are a lot of questions, misunderstandings and accusations around Facebook’s content review practices — including how we as a company care for and compensate the people behind this important work. We are committed to working with our partners to demand a high level of support for their employees; that’s our responsibility and we take it seriously. We know there are going to be incidents of employee dissatisfaction or hardship that call our commitment into question, which is why we’re taking the steps outlined below to continue to set and enforce the expectations we have for our partners.

Below is a post I shared with employees over the weekend about how we approach this work. It has been edited only to remove internal links.


First, a bit of background. Over the past couple of years, as you know, we have substantially scaled our investment in safety and security including rapidly growing our content review teams. We’ve more than doubled this team each of the last two years, adding thousands of people to these efforts. The majority are people who work full time for our partners and work at sites managed by these partners.

In order to scale this quickly, we developed partnerships with highly reputable global partners like Accenture, Cognizant, Genpact and others with good standards for their employee care. For context, Accenture, Cognizant and all of our partners work on projects for multiple clients simultaneously. Accenture employs over 450,000 people in over 200 cities globally and Cognizant employs over 280,000 people. These partnerships are important because they allow us to work with established companies who have a core competency in this type of work and who are able to help us ramp with location and language support quickly. They have experience managing large workforces; scaling quickly for new issues and risks; and adapting with us as the risks to our community and product needs change over time. And, as our needs evolve and we shift focus from an area where our work has grown more mature to an emerging area, we can work in real-time with Accenture, Cognizant and our other partners to address those needs.

A lot of the recent questions are focused on ensuring the people working in these roles are treated fairly and with respect. We want to continue to hear from our content reviewers, our partners and even the media – who hold us accountable and give us the opportunity to improve. This is such an important issue, and our Global Ops leadership team has focused substantial attention on it and will continue to do so.

However, given the size at which we operate and how quickly we’ve grown over the past couple of years, we will inevitably encounter issues we need to address on an ongoing basis. Today, we already have mechanisms in place with our partners who run these sites to make sure any concerns being reported are the uncommon exception and never the norm. These mechanisms include:

We’ve done a lot of work in this area and there’s a lot we still need to do. Arun Chandra recently joined us to lead our vendor partner management efforts for Global Operations – including Business Integrity (BI), Product Data Operations (PDO) and Community Operations (CO). He’s focused squarely on the wellness and experience of our vendor partner employees and is driving several initiatives aimed at continuing to improve the support they receive. Some of these key initiatives include:

We will regularly evaluate these roles, our needs going forward, the risks, location, mix of the workforce and many more areas.

Put simply, after a couple of years of very rapid growth, we’re now further upgrading our work in this area to continue to operate effectively and improve at this size. Going forward, John, Arun, our Global Ops leadership team and I will continue to share our progress and steps forward on this important topic with you.