There has been some movement on the perpetual hashing front, as FB recently published new algorithms based upon more modern techniques that should be a bit more robust. The biggest problem is adversarial reporting to trigger image censorship.https://www.google.com/amp/s/about.fb.com/news/2019/08/open-source-photo-video-matching/amp/ …
Alex is complaining the press didn't understand his solution, but I don't understand it either. He says there are good reasons, but hand-waves away anyone asking what they are... is it not fair to expect a good explanation when you're asking people to take that seriously?
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i don't necessarily like the solution, but i think his point is clear: - if you moderate when the victim uploads, there is a short delay but thereafter you can remove the first occurrence immediately - if you moderate on first occurrence, the photo remains up for a while
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You're missing the key point, you have the hash and facebook has never seen the image before. That's good evidence you own that image, so temporarily block sharing while it's being moderated. Facebook employees do not have to view you nudes until they already had them.
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