The Asian Age

Social media ups the ante against extremist content

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Social media giants Facebook, Google’s YouTube, Twitter and Microsoft said on Monday, 26th June that they were forming a global working group to combine their efforts to remove terrorist content from their platforms.

Responding to pressure from government­s in Europe and the United States after a spate of militant attacks, the companies said they would share technical solutions for removing the terrorist content, commission research to inform their counterspe­ech efforts and work more with counter-terrorism experts as well.

The Global Internet Forum for the Counter Terrorism “will formalize and structure existing and future areas of collaborat­ion between our companies and foster cooperatio­n with smaller tech companies, civil society groups and academics, government­s and the supra-national bodies such as the EU and the UN,” the companies said in a statement.

The move comes on the heels of last week’s call from European heads of state for tech firms to establish an industry forum and develop new technology and tools to improve the automatic detection and removal of extremist content.

The political pressure on the companies has raised the prospect of new legislatio­n at EU level, but so far only Germany has proposed a law fining social media networks up to 50 million euros ($56 million) if they fail to remove hateful postings quickly. The lower house of the German parliament is expected to vote on the law this week. The companies will seek to improve technical work such as a database created in December to share unique digital fingerprin­ts they automatica­lly assign to videos or photos of extremist content on social media.

They will also exchange best practices on content detection techniques using machine learning as well as define “standard transparen­cy reporting methods for terrorist content removals.”

Earlier this month, Facebook opened up about its efforts to remove terrorism content in response to criticism from politician­s that tech giants are not doing enough to stop militant groups using their platforms for propaganda and recruiting.

Google also announced additional measures to identify and remove terrorist or violent extremist content on its video sharing platform YouTube shortly thereafter.

Twitter also suspended 376,890 accounts for violations related to the promotion of terrorism in the second half of 2016 and will share further updates on its efforts to combat violent extremism on its platform in its next Transparen­cy Report.

The social media firms said they would work with smaller companies to help them tackle extremist content and organizati­ons such as the Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies to work on ways to counter online extremism and hate on social media.

All four companies have initiative­s to counter online hate speech and will use the forum to improve their efforts and train civil society organizati­ons engaged in similar work.

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PHOTO: PIXABAY

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