Fact:
On April 3, 2017, the day Vladimir Putin was due to visit the city, a suicide bombing was carried out in the St. Petersburg metro, killing 15 people and injuring 64. An al-Qaeda affiliate, Imam Shamil Battalion, claimed responsibility.
The recent New Zealand attacks have once again made clear that the tech industry’s preferred paradigm of self-regulation has failed. Tech companies have been unable or unwilling to establish clear standards of what constitutes impermissible extremist and terrorist material, or deploy adequate tools to quickly and completely remove such content.
“There is no reason why the tech industry via the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism (GIFCT), or other body, cannot quickly promulgate a baseline standard of ‘worst of the worst’ extremist content with proven links to violence, which tech should immediately eradicate from their platforms. By ‘worst of the worst’ we mean content that when left online, will radicalize and inspire others to violence,” said Counter Extremism Project (CEP) Executive Director David Ibsen. “For example, an industry-wide restriction on content promoting or produced by groups on U.S., EU, and U.N. sanctions lists as well as individuals and specific pieces of content with proven links to violence, would be respectful of the rule of law and make common sense. There is simply no reason why such content should be available online. If the industry, and its self-appointed representative bodies like GIFCT, cannot adapt such simple and obvious standards for what constitutes harmful and therefore prohibited content, then governments must step in to protect users and the citizenry at large.”
In 2017, led by Facebook, Google and Twitter, the tech industry created the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism (GIFCT). GIFCT was established in part coordinate the industry response to the misuse of Internet platforms and services by extremist and terrorist actors. Facebook’s spectacular failure to stop the livestream of the New Zealand shootings and halt reuploads of the video onto other sites and platforms makes it clear that the time and resources spent on this coalition has amounted to very little, especially as Facebook admits its algorithms can’t even distinguish between shootings and “visually similar” but harmless video games.
Since January, CEP has spotlighted several notorious propagandists and pieces of content that the tech industry should be flagging for permanent removal:
Extremists: Their Words. Their Actions.
Fact:
On April 3, 2017, the day Vladimir Putin was due to visit the city, a suicide bombing was carried out in the St. Petersburg metro, killing 15 people and injuring 64. An al-Qaeda affiliate, Imam Shamil Battalion, claimed responsibility.
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