Meta

Community Standards Enforcement Report, Second Quarter 2021

Today we’re publishing the Community Standards Enforcement Report for the second quarter of 2021. This report provides metrics on how we enforced our policies from April through June. This is our 10th report and some of our long-term trends include: 

In addition to our Community Standards Enforcement Report, this quarter we’re also sharing:

We’re committed to sharing meaningful data so we can be held accountable for our progress, even if the data shows areas where we need to do better. 

Today, we’re also releasing the first in a series of reports that will give an overview of the most widely-viewed content in Facebook’s News Feed, starting with the top 20 most viewed domains, links, Pages and posts in the US. These reports are public in the Transparency Center and we will include them with each quarterly Community Standards Enforcement Report going forward. 

Promoting Reliable Information and Reducing Harmful Misinformation About COVID-19

COVID-19 is still a major public health issue, and we are committed to helping people get authoritative information, including vaccine information. We continue to remove harmful COVID-19 misinformation and prohibit ads that try to exploit the pandemic for financial gain. Since the start of the pandemic through June: 

We’ve provided authoritative information to help improve vaccine acceptance, connecting 2 billion people to resources from health experts through our COVID-19 Information Center and educational pop-ups on Facebook and Instagram and helping 4 million people in the US alone access vaccines through our vaccine finder tool.

We know from public health research that people are more likely to get vaccinated if they see others in their community doing so. In countries where vaccines are available to most people, we ramped up our efforts to show when friends and neighbors share their support for vaccines through profile frames and stickers.

For people in the US on Facebook, vaccine hesitancy has declined by 50%. Globally, we have also seen vaccine acceptance rising. For example, our COVID-19 Trends and Impact Survey data which we conduct in partnership with Carnegie-Mellon and University of Maryland has since the beginning of the year shown vaccine acceptance rising by 35 percent in France, 25 percent in Indonesia, and 20 percent in Nigeria. 

Community Standards Enforcement Report Highlights

Progress on Hate Speech 

Prevalence of hate speech on Facebook continued to decrease for the third quarter in a row. In Q2, it was 0.05%, or 5 views per 10,000 views, down from 0.05-0.06%, or 5 to 6 views per 10,000 views in Q1. 

We removed 31.5 million pieces of hate speech content from Facebook, compared to 25.2 million in Q1, and 9.8 million from Instagram, up from 6.3 million in Q1. This is due to continued improvement in our proactive detection. Our investments in AI enable us to detect more kinds of hate speech violations on Facebook and Instagram. This technology helps us enforce our policies across billions of users and multiple languages. Steady, continuous AI improvements and advancements, such as the Reinforcement Integrity Optimizer (RIO), enable our AI models to spot hate speech using real-world data and improve over time.

Updates in Child Safety

Keeping children safe on our apps is critical. Previously, we reported one metric, child nudity and sexual exploitation of children. In our latest report, we’ve added more data and created two new reporting categories under the broader topic of child endangerment: 1) nudity and physical abuse and 2) sexual exploitation.

We changed this to provide a more detailed, transparent overview of our efforts in this space to child safety experts, academics and the general public. 

In Q2 2021, we improved our proactive detection technology on videos and expanded our media-matching technology on Facebook, allowing us to remove more old, violating content. Both enabled us to take action on more violating content. 

Recent Trends 

In addition to new categories and ongoing improvements in reducing prevalence, we saw steady progress across many problem areas. 

On Facebook in Q2 we took action on:

On Instagram in Q2 we took action on: