Facebook Makes Photo, Video Matching Tech Available to All

The two Facebook technologies can detect identical and nearly identical photos and videos.

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 2 August 2019 17:19 IST

Facebook has open-sourced its photo and video matching technologies for people to identify harmful content such as child exploitation, terrorist propaganda or graphic violence.

The two Facebook technologies can detect identical and nearly identical photos and videos.

Advertisement

"These algorithms will be open-sourced on GitHub so our industry partners, smaller developers and non-profits can use them to more easily identify abusive content and share hashes or digital fingerprints of different types of harmful content," Guy Rosen, Vice President of Integrity at Facebook, said in a statement late Thursday.

"For those who already use their own or other content matching technology, these technologies are another layer of defence and allow hash-sharing systems to talk to each other, making the systems that much more powerful," added Antigone Davis, Global Head of Safety.

Advertisement

According to John Clark, President and CEO of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) in the US, in just one year, they witnessed a 541 percent increase in the number of child sexual abuse videos reported by the tech industry to the CyberTipline.

"We are confident that Facebook's generous contribution of this open-source technology will ultimately lead to the identification and rescue of more child sexual abuse victims," said Clark.

Advertisement

Building on Microsoft's generous contribution of PhotoDNA to fight child exploitation 10 years ago and the more recent launch of Google "Content Safety API", the Facebook's announcement is part of an industry-wide commitment to building a safer internet.

Known as "PDQ" and "TMK+PDQF", these technologies are part of a suite of tools used at Facebook to detect harmful content.

Advertisement

The technologies create an efficient way to store files as short digital hashes that can determine whether two files are the same or similar, even without the original image or video.

Hashes can also be more easily shared with other companies and non-profits, said Facebook.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Facebook
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. YouTuber Demonstrates Flaw That Allows Money to Be Stolen From Locked iPhone
  2. OnePlus Pad 4 to Launch in India With a 13,380mAh Battery on This Date
  3. Oppo F33 Pro 5G vs OnePlus Nord 6 vs Nothing Phone 4a Pro: Which One Should You Pick?
  1. OnePlus Nord CE 6 Lite Appears on Geekbench With Dimensity 7400 Chip, Android 16
  2. Meta’s Planned Facial Recognition Feature for Smart Glasses Faces Opposition From Privacy Orgs
  3. Vivo X300 Ultra Pricing Surfaces Online via Retail Listing in Europe
  4. YouTube's New Option Lets Users Effectively Turn Off Shorts From Their Feed
  5. South Korea Plans Blockchain-Based Payments for Government Spending
  6. Amazon Launches AI Store to Help Users Discover and Shop AI-Powered Devices
  7. Motorola Razr Fold, Lenovo Legion Y70 to Launch Alongside Y900 Tablet During Lenovo's May 19 Event
  8. Apple Tap-to-Pay Vulnerability Demonstrated on Video as YouTuber Steals $10,000 From a Locked iPhone
  9. Adobe’s New Firefly AI Assistant Can Perform Complex Design Tasks With Text Prompts
  10. Crimson Desert Has Sold Over 5 Million Copies, Pearl Abyss Confirms
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.