KEY POINTS
  • Facebook officials touted new fact-checking efforts and technological advances such as the ability to detect when videos had been doctored.
  • On April 1, the firm said it had removed more than 500 accounts and 138 pages linked to India's opposition party for "coordinated inauthentic behavior."
  • Governments in many countries, including India and the UK, are contemplating strict new regulations for social media companies.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg attend a town hall meeting at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California in September 2015.

Facebook has said it has made strides in its efforts to prevent online abuses in the Indian national election that starts this week but acknowledged that gaps remain in its "election integrity" efforts.

During a media tour of the company's election operations center at its Menlo Park headquarters in California on Friday, company officials touted new fact-checking efforts for suppressing misinformation and technological advances such as the ability to detect when videos had been doctored.