Facebook to use Met Police videos to recognise shooters

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightMet PoliceImage caption Facebook will be given access to footage from bodycams worn by Specialist
Firearms Command officers during their training Facebook is to use footage from police body cameras to train its algorithms
to recognise videos of real-life shootings.The technology giant will give the cameras to Metropolitan Police Specialist Firearms Command
officers.It will then capture footage as they carry out regular training.Facebook was criticised for failing to prevent copies of videos of
the Christchurch mosque shootings from being shared on its platform.The announcement came the day before Facebook and other tech firms will
face questions from US senators about their efforts to identify and remove violent content from their platforms."We did not have enough
content depicting first-person footage of violent events to effectively train our machine learning technology," it said in a blog.The
Metropolitan Police said it was "happy to help" develop the technology."Technology that automatically stops livestreaming of attacks once
identified, would also significantly help prevent the glorification of such acts and the promotion of the toxic ideologies that drive them,"
assistant commissioner for specialist operations Neil Basu said.Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption Firearms
instructors have dressed up as terrorists during past training exercises for armed officers in the Metropolitan Police But
one artificial intelligence researcher said it could take many years for the project to come to fruition."This is definitely a difficult
problem and I don't see Facebook solving it soon," explained Christopher Tegho, a software engineer who specialises in video
understanding."I guess it could be helpful for Facebook to be able to gather more data from something that is close to a real first-person
shooter video to help train its models."But we are still not close to the same accuracy levels at being able to recognise what is going on
in the scene of a video as we are to recognising what is in a still image."Facebook also said it had:removed more than 26 million posts
related to groups such as Islamic State and al-Qaedabanned more than 200 groups dedicated to white supremacy"In March, we started connecting
people who search for terms associated with white supremacy on Facebook Search to resources focused on helping people leave behind hate
groups," it said.