Facebook has been criticized recently for not doing 
enough to prevent videos of such murders and suicides from spreading on 
its service.
Videos and 
posts that glorify violence are against Facebook's terms of service but
 in most cases, users have to report them to the company for them to be 
reviewed and possibly removed.
Following the high rate of life-streamed suicide, hate speech, crimes and 
child abuse being broadcast on the platform live, Facebook CEO, Mark 
Zuckerberg says he will be recruiting 3000 workers as its 'community operations 
team' to help review content.
Mark Zuckerberg has taken to his official Facebook account to announce the company's plan, in a Facebook post, he said:
'Over
 the last few weeks, we've seen people hurting themselves and others on 
Facebook -- either live or in a video posted later. It's heartbreaking, 
and I've been reflecting on how we can do better for our community.
If
 we're going to build a safe community, we need to respond quickly. 
We're working to make these videos easier to report so we can take the 
right action sooner -- whether that's responding quickly when someone 
needs help or taking a post down.
Over the next
 year, we'll be adding 3,000 people to our community operations team 
around the world -- on top of the 4,500, we have today -- to review the 
millions of reports we get every week, and improve the process for doing
 it quickly.
These reviewers will also help us 
get better at removing things we don't allow on Facebook like hate 
speech and child exploitation. And we'll keep working with local 
community groups and law enforcement who are in the best position to 
help someone if they need it -- either because they're about to harm 
themselves, or because they're in danger from someone else.
In
 addition to investing in more people, we're also building better tools 
to keep our community safe. We’re going to make it simpler to report 
problems to us, faster for our reviewers to determine which posts 
violate our standards and easier for them to contact law enforcement if 
someone needs help. As these become available they should help make our 
community safer.
This is important. Just last 
week, we got a report that someone on Live was considering suicide. We 
immediately reached out to law enforcement, and they were able to 
prevent him from hurting himself. In other cases, we weren't so 
fortunate.
No one should be in this situation 
in the first place, but if they are, then we should build a safe 
community that gets them the help they need.

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