What Do We Mean When We Talk About Transparency? Toward Meaningful Transparency in Commercial Content Moderation

Authors

  • Nicolas P. Suzor Queensland University of Technology
  • Sarah Myers West AI Now Institute, New York University
  • Andrew Quodling Queensland University of Technology
  • Jillian York Electronic Frontier Foundation

Keywords:

content moderation, platforms, transparency, due process

Abstract

This article seeks to provide greater specificity to demands for transparency in the commercial content moderation practices of digital platforms. We identify gaps in knowledge through a thematic analysis of 380 survey responses from individuals who have been the subject of content moderation decisions. We argue that meaningful transparency should be understood as a component of a communicative process of accountability (rendering account) to independent stakeholders. We make specific recommendations for platforms to provide people with clear information about decisions that affect them, including what content is moderated, which rule was breached, and a description of the people and automated processes responsible for identifying content and making the decision. Beyond providing more information to individuals about particular decisions, however, we note the major challenge of improving understanding of content moderation at a systems level. General demands for greater transparency should be reframed to focus on enhanced access to large-scale disaggregated data that can enable new methods and collaborations among academia, civil society, and journalists to make these systems more understandable and accountable.

Author Biographies

Nicolas P. Suzor, Queensland University of Technology

Associate Professor, Law    2018

Sarah Myers West, AI Now Institute, New York University

Postdoctoral Researcher

Andrew Quodling, Queensland University of Technology

Research assistant

Jillian York, Electronic Frontier Foundation

Director for International Freedom of Expression

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Published

2019-03-27

Issue

Section

Articles