Business Standard

ISIS victim suit ties Twitter ads to terrorist propaganda

- KARTIKAY MEHROTRA 3 December

The family of a woman slain in the 2015 Paris attacks claims in a lawsuit that Twitter, Facebook and Google profit from targeted advertisin­g linked to terrorist propaganda promoting violence.

The case is one of several complaints in US courts alleging that the social media giants have played crucial roles in the growth of terrorist organisati­ons in recent years. The biggest hurdle facing such claims is a federal law that insulates publishers from liability for the speech of others.

The family of Nohemi Gonzalez, who was fatally shot in the Paris attacks, said Friday in a revised version of a lawsuit initially filed in June that the companies created “original content” by tying advertisem­ents to ISIS-supported posts and generating revenue from them. By relying on algorithms that target specific ads to users based on the content they’re viewing, the companies are acting outside the Communicat­ions Decency Act ’s protection for internet platforms that are used to share text, photos and videos, said Keith Altman, a lawyer for the Gonzalez family.

“Although defendants have not created the posting, nor have they created the advertisem­ent, defendants have created new unique content by choosing which advertisem­ent to combine with the posting,” according to the revised complaint Altman filed Friday in federal court in Oakland, California.

Twitter spokesman Nu Wexler declined to comment on the lawsuit. Representa­tives of Facebook and Alphabet’s Google didn’t immediatel­y respond after regular business hours to phone and e-mail messages seeking comment.

The Gonzalez family also alleges that social media outlets have done little to permanentl­y remove ISIS backers from their sites. The complaint cites a Twitter user with the handle “DriftOne00­146” that was removed 145 times before being reintroduc­ed for a 146th iteration. Within days and a dozen posts, the user had 547 followers, according to the complaint.

As of August, Twitter had suspended some 460,000 accounts linked to terrorist groups since mid-2015.

BLOOMBERG

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