Sandberg said in a Facebook post that the final report of the civil rights audit, which reviewed its policies for two years, will be published Wednesday, but the company has already made changes based on it.
"It has helped us learn a lot about what we could do better, and we have put many recommendations from the auditors and the wider civil rights community into practice," Sandberg said.
At the beginning of her her post, Sandberg focused on enforcement of the social media company's policy's against hate as an area where it can "get better and faster."
She added that she would meet with organizers of the Stop Hate for Profit campaign Tuesday, along with
"We meet in the context of what may be the largest social movement in
Murphy led the civil rights audit along with
Sandberg said that Facebook is the first social media company to go through such an audit.
"While the audit was planned and most of it carried out long before recent events, its release couldn't come at a more important time," Sandberg said.
On
"We are making changes -- not for financial reasons or advertiser pressure, but because it is the right thing to do," Sandberg said Tuesday. "We have worked for years to try to minimize the presence of hate on our platform. That's why we agreed to undertake the civil rights audit two years ago."
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