Stanford To Set Up An “Internet Observatory” For Abuse Monitoring

Harin - Jul 27, 2019


Stanford To Set Up An “Internet Observatory” For Abuse Monitoring

Alex Stamos, Facebook's ex-security head, now a visiting professor at Standford is building a new tool helping researchers study online harassment and disinformation.

Facebook’s former head of security, Alex Stamos is developing a new tool that will assist researchers in studying online disinformation and harassment.

Stamos compares Stanford Internet Observatory, the name of his project with the Hubble Space Telescope. He envisions the Stanford Internet Observatory as a shared pool of resources that researchers can make use of without the need to build their own, according to Wired. But to persuade companies like Google and Facebook to agree on sharing their user data, it will require tough negotiations, especially after some recent privacy scandals.

Alex-Stamos
Alex Stamos, Facebook’s former head of security.

Stamos brings up the political information incident that happened during the 2016 presidential election as an example of the kind of problems that he and his colleagues want the observatory to study and prevent. He said:

Quote

Stamos supervised the giant social media’s security when the Cambridge scandal broke out which resulted in the company receiving a $5 billion fine. He is now requiring access to user data from Google, Twitter, Facebook, and Reddit.

The idea is to make data coming from these tech giants anonymous, and at the same time, looking for anonymous as well as already-public posts on hate-filled sites like 8chan and 4chan.

The observatory will be placed at the Stanford Cyber Policy Center. Nate Persily, co-director of the center, said:

Quote

According to Stamos, engineers at the Silicon Valley are not prepared to take on disinformation and the hate spreading on their platforms. Therefore, the only solution is to let them access this kind of data.

Stamos said:

Quote

Comments

Sort by Newest | Popular

Next Story

Read more

Escalating Costs for NVIDIA RTX 50 Series GPUs: RTX 5090 Tops $5,000, RTX 5060 Ti Closes in on RTX 5070 Pricing

ICT News- Feb 19, 2026

Escalating Costs for NVIDIA RTX 50 Series GPUs: RTX 5090 Tops $5,000, RTX 5060 Ti Closes in on RTX 5070 Pricing

As the RTX 50 series continues to push boundaries in gaming and AI, these price trends raise questions about accessibility for average gamers.

Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID

ICT News- Feb 18, 2026

Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID

As the smartphone landscape evolves, Google's push toward superior face unlock technology underscores its ambition to close the gap with Apple in user security and convenience.

Tech Leaders Question AI Agents' Value: Human Labor Remains More Affordable

ICT News- Feb 20, 2026

Tech Leaders Question AI Agents' Value: Human Labor Remains More Affordable

In a recent episode of the All-In podcast, prominent tech investors and entrepreneurs expressed skepticism about the immediate practicality of deploying AI agents in business operations.