Toxicity in Online Platforms and AI Systems: A Survey of Needs, Challenges, Mitigations, and Future Directions
September 29, 2025 ยท The Cartographer ยท ๐ Expert systems with applications
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"Title-pattern auto-detect: Toxicity in Online Platforms and AI Systems: A Survey of Needs, Challenges, Mitigations, and Future "
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Authors
Smita Khapre, Melkamu Abay Mersha, Hassan Shakil, Jonali Baruah, Jugal Kalita
arXiv ID
2509.25539
Category
cs.CY: Computers & Society
Cross-listed
cs.AI,
cs.CL,
cs.HC,
cs.SI
Citations
2
Venue
Expert systems with applications
Last Checked
4 days ago
Abstract
The evolution of digital communication systems and the designs of online platforms have inadvertently facilitated the subconscious propagation of toxic behavior. Giving rise to reactive responses to toxic behavior. Toxicity in online content and Artificial Intelligence Systems has become a serious challenge to individual and collective well-being around the world. It is more detrimental to society than we realize. Toxicity, expressed in language, image, and video, can be interpreted in various ways depending on the context of usage. Therefore, a comprehensive taxonomy is crucial to detect and mitigate toxicity in online content, Artificial Intelligence systems, and/or Large Language Models in a proactive manner. A comprehensive understanding of toxicity is likely to facilitate the design of practical solutions for toxicity detection and mitigation. The classification in published literature has focused on only a limited number of aspects of this very complex issue, with a pattern of reactive strategies in response to toxicity. This survey attempts to generate a comprehensive taxonomy of toxicity from various perspectives. It presents a holistic approach to explain the toxicity by understanding the context and environment that society is facing in the Artificial Intelligence era. This survey summarizes the toxicity-related datasets and research on toxicity detection and mitigation for Large Language Models, social media platforms, and other online platforms, detailing their attributes in textual mode, focused on the English language. Finally, we suggest the research gaps in toxicity mitigation based on datasets, mitigation strategies, Large Language Models, adaptability, explainability, and evaluation.
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