abhik1505040 davanstrien HF staff commited on
Commit
4584e63
1 Parent(s): cbbbc24

Add metadata for dataset used to train model (#2)

Browse files

- Add metadata for dataset used to train model (130e33a88079ad8c9256d5021294c11d01a36841)


Co-authored-by: Daniel van Strien <davanstrien@users.noreply.huggingface.co>

Files changed (1) hide show
  1. README.md +20 -2
README.md CHANGED
@@ -49,8 +49,26 @@ language:
49
  licenses:
50
  - cc-by-nc-sa-4.0
51
  widget:
52
- - text: "Videos that say approved vaccines are dangerous and cause autism, cancer or infertility are among those that will be taken down, the company said. The policy includes the termination of accounts of anti-vaccine influencers. Tech giants have been criticised for not doing more to counter false health information on their sites. In July, US President Joe Biden said social media platforms were largely responsible for people's scepticism in getting vaccinated by spreading misinformation, and appealed for them to address the issue. YouTube, which is owned by Google, said 130,000 videos were removed from its platform since last year, when it implemented a ban on content spreading misinformation about Covid vaccines. In a blog post, the company said it had seen false claims about Covid jabs \"spill over into misinformation about vaccines in general\". The new policy covers long-approved vaccines, such as those against measles or hepatitis B. \"We're expanding our medical misinformation policies on YouTube with new guidelines on currently administered vaccines that are approved and confirmed to be safe and effective by local health authorities and the WHO,\" the post said, referring to the World Health Organization."
53
-
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
54
  ---
55
 
56
  # mT5-m2m-CrossSum
49
  licenses:
50
  - cc-by-nc-sa-4.0
51
  widget:
52
+ - text: >-
53
+ Videos that say approved vaccines are dangerous and cause autism, cancer or
54
+ infertility are among those that will be taken down, the company said. The
55
+ policy includes the termination of accounts of anti-vaccine influencers.
56
+ Tech giants have been criticised for not doing more to counter false health
57
+ information on their sites. In July, US President Joe Biden said social
58
+ media platforms were largely responsible for people's scepticism in getting
59
+ vaccinated by spreading misinformation, and appealed for them to address the
60
+ issue. YouTube, which is owned by Google, said 130,000 videos were removed
61
+ from its platform since last year, when it implemented a ban on content
62
+ spreading misinformation about Covid vaccines. In a blog post, the company
63
+ said it had seen false claims about Covid jabs "spill over into
64
+ misinformation about vaccines in general". The new policy covers
65
+ long-approved vaccines, such as those against measles or hepatitis B.
66
+ "We're expanding our medical misinformation policies on YouTube with new
67
+ guidelines on currently administered vaccines that are approved and
68
+ confirmed to be safe and effective by local health authorities and the WHO,"
69
+ the post said, referring to the World Health Organization.
70
+ datasets:
71
+ - csebuetnlp/CrossSum
72
  ---
73
 
74
  # mT5-m2m-CrossSum