Oman Daily Observer

Web giants to join hands to remove extremist content

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BRUSSELS: Web giants YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Microsoft will step up efforts to remove extremist content from their websites by creating a common database.

The companies will share ‘hashes’ — unique digital fingerprin­ts they automatica­lly assign to videos or photos — of extremist content they have removed from their websites to enable their peers to identify the same content on their platforms.

“We hope this collaborat­ion will lead to greater efficiency as we continue to enforce our policies to help curb the pressing global issue of terrorist content online,” the companies said in a statement on Tuesday.

Tech companies have long resisted outside interventi­on in how their sites should be policed, but have come under increasing pressure from Western government­s to do more to remove extremist content following a wave of militant attacks.

YouTube and Facebook have begun to use hashes to automatica­lly remove extremist content.

But many providers have relied until now mainly on users to flag content that violates terms of service.

Flagged material is then individual­ly reviewed by human editors who delete postings found to be in violation.

Twitter suspended 235,000 accounts between February and August this year and has expanded the teams reviewing reports of extremist content.

Each company will decide what image and video hashes to add to the database and matching content will not be automatica­lly removed, they said.

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