New York, Sep 2 : As more Hindu-hating incidents have been reported in the US artificial intelligence is being used to monitor Hinduphobic tweets.The results are available in real time, are collected and released in monthly reports according to Ramesh Rao, the editor of India Facts, a US-based publication.Hindumisia.ai collects Hindu-related Twitter tweets and analyzes them for content that is Hinduphobic and then publishes them on the internet as a real-time gauge of opinions against the religion as well as those who are associated with the religion.
Twitter tweets are graded based on their “anti-Hindu intensity” as “moderate”, “severe” or “toxic”.
For instance, during the course of 24 hours on Wednesday, Hindumisia found 1,358 tweets it classified as anti-Hindu.Similarly, throughout the month of August, it found 45,057 of these tweets, of which, it stated, in their “anti-Hindu intensity” 70% were “toxic”, 25.7 per percent “severe” and 5.4 percent “moderate”.
It also analyzes tweets posted by readers in an open manner and denies it as “not Hindumisic” those that don’t meet its strict requirements.
“It is time to conduct the same kind of reporting in an orderly and systematic way so that we can expose to the world that part of the world of social media that is filled with the hatred of Hindus as well as Hinduism,” said Rao who runs the publication.monthly reports.
The publication partners with Hindumisia for the publication of monthly reports.
He said that Hindumisia was inspected for false positives, and its creators “are now confident of the authenticity, reliability, and authenticity of the information gathered which has led to the release of monthly reports”.
Ramsundar Lakshminarayanan, a Chicago-based IT executive from Chicago with expertise in Data Analytics, who created the app for monitoring Hinduphobia on Twitter He stated, “The next step in this process is to make use of the AI model to analyze information from different social media sites.”
He said that “more sophisticated analysis of networks” is required “to be able to understand how Hinduphobic messages or tweets are shared across the globe and who might be involved in propagating this hatred of Hindus as well as Hinduism”.
“Much of this hate might be encouraged if not pushed, either insidiously or indirectly by mainstream media, and some scholars is significant reason to be concerned, and India Facts will continue to expose such attitudes and statements,” Rao said.
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