Uncertainty Estimation For Community Standards Violation In Online Social Networks
This work addresses the challenge of accurately monitoring low-violation content for online platforms, though it is incremental as it improves upon existing statistical methods for a specific domain.
The paper tackles the problem of estimating the prevalence of community standards violations in online social networks, where only a tiny fraction of content can be manually labeled, by introducing two novel techniques, Bucketed-Beta-Binomial and Bucketed-Gaussian Process, which demonstrate significantly better coverage than existing bootstrapping methods on real and simulated data.
Online Social Networks (OSNs) provide a platform for users to share their thoughts and opinions with their community of friends or to the general public. In order to keep the platform safe for all users, as well as to keep it compliant with local laws, OSNs typically create a set of community standards organized into policy groups, and use Machine Learning (ML) models to identify and remove content that violates any of the policies. However, out of the billions of content that is uploaded on a daily basis only a small fraction is so unambiguously violating that it can be removed by the automated models. Prevalence estimation is the task of estimating the fraction of violating content in the residual items by sending a small sample of these items to human labelers to get ground truth labels. This task is exceedingly hard because even though we can easily get the ML scores or features for all of the billions of items we can only get ground truth labels on a few thousands of these items due to practical considerations. Indeed the prevalence can be so low that even after a judicious choice of items to be labeled there can be many days in which not even a single item is labeled violating. A pragmatic choice for such low prevalence, $10^{-4}$ to $10^{-5}$, regimes is to report the upper bound, or $97.5\%$ confidence interval, prevalence (UBP) that takes the uncertainties of the sampling and labeling processes into account and gives a smoothed estimate. In this work we present two novel techniques Bucketed-Beta-Binomial and a Bucketed-Gaussian Process for this UBP task and demonstrate on real and simulated data that it has much better coverage than the commonly used bootstrapping technique.