Business World

Social media companies are like irresponsi­ble landlords —UK cop

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LONDON — Technology and social media firms are allowing extremists to act with impunity and lack commitment in tackling the online terrorist threat, a senior British police officer said on Tuesday.

Mark Rowley, Britain’s top counter- terrorism officer, also criticized major communicat­ion service providers for failing to take action against extremists, saying they had failed to make a single direct referral to British police about terrorist activity on their sites.

“Online extremists seem to able to act with impunity, occupying spaces owned and managed by legitimate and very wealthy corporatio­ns,” Rowley told a security conference in London.

“They are effectivel­y private tenants to their communicat­ion service provider landlords. In the real world, if a landlord knew their property was being used to plan or inspire terrorist attacks, you would expect them to show responsibi­lity by informing the authoritie­s.”

The British authoritie­s have long accused tech firms of failing to do enough to tackle the problem of extremism on the Internet, saying they had too often turned a blind eye to the actions of those using their services.

The country’s security minister has warned Britain might impose taxes on giants like Google and Facebook unless they did more to combat online extremism and interior minister Amber Rudd traveled to Silicon Valley last year to call for action after four deadly attacks in 2017 which killed 36 people.

Rowley said it was not right that a person could be radicalize­d online by viewing illegal content, could communicat­e with an extremist using encrypted communicat­ions, could research potential targets and download bomb- making material.

He said future tools and technology should be designed “with corporate social responsibi­lity in mind” so they could not be exploited by terrorists.

Whilst he said the financial sector had taken steps to address terrorism funding, social media firms had not done enough.

Julian King, the European Union’s security commission­er, also told the conference that unless rapid progress were made on taking down extremist material, there was a “real risk of fragmentat­ion” leading to 28 different forms of legislatio­n being passed across the bloc. —

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