A/HRC/56/54
(e)
Governments redirect even a small fraction of border security budgets to
campaigns that foster social cohesion and enrichment;
(f)
Stakeholders systematically monitor, collect data and evidence and report
on and make available information on migrants’ contributions, including through the
maintenance of databases and surveys on immigration outcomes;
(g)
Stakeholders consider the full sociocultural, civic-political and economic
contributions of migrants and refrain from referring to migrants as having only
transactional economic utility;
(h)
Digital platforms ensure safety and privacy in all products, alongside
policies and resources across countries and languages, including by:
(i)
Ensuring meaningful transparency regarding artificial intelligence,
algorithms, data, content moderation and advertising and that they are safe,
secure, responsible and ethical and comply with human rights obligations;
(ii)
Publishing and publicizing accessible policies on misinformation,
disinformation and hate speech and reporting on the prevalence of coordinated
disinformation operations on their services and the efficacy of policies to counter
such operations;
(iii) Moving away from business models that prioritize engagement over
human rights, privacy and safety;
(iv) Ensuring safety and privacy in all products, including through adequate
resourcing of in-house trust and safety expertise, alongside the consistent
application of policies across countries and languages;
(v)
Investing in human and artificial intelligence content moderation systems
in all languages used in countries of operation and ensuring that content
reporting mechanisms are transparent, with an accelerated response rate,
especially in conflict settings;
(i)
Governments, together with other actors, collaborate to uncover and hold
to account the authors of disinformation relating to migrants, particularly when
produced and spread by organized groups and online influencers;
(j)
All actors, including States, international organizations, NGOs, civil
society groups, traditional and social media outlets, businesses and individuals review
and make use of relevant OHCHR guidelines, campaigns and tools to ensure that the
narrative around migration reflects the positive force that it represents.
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GE.24-07075