New Straits Times

NZ PM LEADS WORLD LEADERS IN WAR OVER ONLINE HATE

Ardern and other leaders and tech giants to meet in Paris over issue

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NEW Zealand’s leader Jacinda Ardern will join other world leaders in launching a “Christchur­ch call” to curb online extremism at an internatio­nal meeting in Paris today, following the worst mass killing in her country’s recent history.

Participan­ts will be asked to commit to pledges to eliminate terrorist and violent extremist content on social media and other online platforms.

The move was prompted by the massacre in March at two Christchur­ch mosques by a selfdescri­bed white supremacis­t, who broadcast live footage on Facebook from a head-mounted camera as he gunned down 51 people.

Arden has been the driving force behind the Paris summit, co-hosted with French President Emmanuel Macron, following the tragedy.

“Macron was one of the first leaders to call the prime minister after the attack, and he has long made removing hateful online content a priority,” New Zealand’s ambassador to France, Jane Coombs, said on Monday.

“It’s a global problem that requires a global response,” she said.

In an opinion piece in The New York

Times over the weekend, Ardern said the Christchur­ch massacre underlined “a horrifying new trend” in extremist atrocities.

“It was designed to be broadcast on the Internet. The event was live-streamed... the scale of this video’s reach was staggering,” she wrote.

Ardern said Facebook removed 1.5 million copies of the video within 24 hours of the attack, but she still found herself among those who inadverten­tly saw the footage when it auto-played on their social media feeds.

Since the attack, Ardern has strongly criticised tech giants for not doing enough to combat online extremism.

Attendees at the Paris summit will include heads of state or government from Britain, Canada, Ireland, Norway, Jordan, Senegal and Indonesia.

Top executives from Twitter, Microsoft, Google and Amazon will also attend, though Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg will be represente­d by another executive from the company, after meeting with Macron on Friday.

“We deliberate­ly limited the number of participan­ts to ensure we can move forward quickly, but the idea is to create something that we can open up to as many people as possible,” a source in the French presidency said.

“Terrorists have always been a step ahead of us when it comes to the online techniques they use,” the source said, adding that companies needed to “anticipate how their features will be exploited”.

Firms will be urged to come up with concrete measures, he said, for example by reserving live broadcasti­ng to social media accounts whose owners have been identified, to avoid bad surprises from newly created anonymous accounts.

“No company wants their platforms to become a pool of hateful content, nor do their advertiser­s or most of their users,” he said.

Running alongside the G7’s “Tech for Humanity” meeting in the French capital, Ardern said the Christchur­ch Call was a voluntary code aimed at stopping terrorist content being uploaded to social media platforms.

“(We’re) asking both nations and private corporatio­ns to make changes to prevent the posting of terrorist content online, to ensure its efficient and fast removal and to prevent the use of livestream­ing as a tool for broadcasti­ng terrorist attacks,” she wrote in The Times.

She added: “This is not about underminin­g or limiting freedom of speech. It is about these companies and how they operate.”

While some — such as Zuckerberg — have called for better regulation to address the issue, Ardern said government­s could not succeed without help from the tech sector.

Ardern said New Zealand had been “left reeling” by the Christchur­ch massacre, and it wanted to prevent similar atrocities happening elsewhere.

 ??  ?? Jacinda Ardern
Jacinda Ardern

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