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arxiv:2507.10605

RedOne: Revealing Domain-specific LLM Post-Training in Social Networking Services

Published on Jul 13
· Submitted by Hiiamein on Jul 21
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Abstract

RedOne, a domain-specific LLM, enhances performance across multiple SNS tasks through a three-stage training strategy, improving generalization and reducing harmful content exposure.

AI-generated summary

As a primary medium for modern information dissemination, social networking services (SNS) have experienced rapid growth, which has proposed significant challenges for platform content management and interaction quality improvement. Recently, the development of large language models (LLMs) has offered potential solutions but existing studies focus on isolated tasks, which not only encounter diminishing benefit from the data scaling within individual scenarios but also fail to flexibly adapt to diverse real-world context. To address these challenges, we introduce RedOne, a domain-specific LLM designed to break the performance bottleneck of single-task baselines and establish a comprehensive foundation for the SNS. RedOne was developed through a three-stage training strategy consisting of continue pretraining, supervised fine-tuning, and preference optimization, using a large-scale real-world dataset. Through extensive experiments, RedOne maintains strong general capabilities, and achieves an average improvement up to 14.02% across 8 major SNS tasks and 7.56% in SNS bilingual evaluation benchmark, compared with base models. Furthermore, through online testing, RedOne reduced the exposure rate in harmful content detection by 11.23% and improved the click page rate in post-view search by 14.95% compared with single-tasks finetuned baseline models. These results establish RedOne as a robust domain-specific LLM for SNS, demonstrating excellent generalization across various tasks and promising applicability in real-world scenarios.

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An In-Depth Study Revealing Domain-Specific LLM Post-Training in the Context of Social Networking Services.

It seems like a paradigm of Domain-specific LLM

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