Cape Times

Who clicks most on IS content?

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LONDON: Who looks at Islamist extremist content online?

A new study released on Tuesday by the Policy Exchange think tank in London, whose reports often inform government policy in Britain, ranked the top consumers of propaganda produced by the Islamic State, by country of origin, as measured by clicks.

The top consumers of IS videos were from Turkey, the US, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Britain, which registered the largest number of clicks in Europe.

The report, The New Netwar, indicates that IS is pumping out more material than ever.

However, the number of people looking in any one country could be measured in the tens of thousands. And big internet companies could limit what is available, should they choose or be forced to do so.

“We are certainly not winning the war online,” the report said.

“The spate of terrorist attacks the UK suffered in the first half of 2017 confirmed that online extremism is a real and present danger.

“In each case, online radicalisa­tion played some part in driving the perpetrato­rs to violence.

“As a society, we are struggling to grasp the extent of the challenge and also appropriat­e ways of responding. It is clear that the status quo is not working.”

Although IS is being driven from its territorie­s in Syria and Iraq, the authors said “the movement produces around 100 pieces of new content in an average week (and often much more than that).

“This adds to an ever-growing archive of material built up over three decades”.

They said that IS has released 2 000 “official” videos.

“This number rises to 6 000 when the wider jihadist movement is included,” the authors said.

The report states that the material is often first disseminat­ed to core followers via the Telegram messaging app, “before being pumped out into the mainstream social media space (via Twitter, Facebook and other leading platforms)”.

The authors found that than 40% of the clicks on IS propaganda were referred through Twitter.

The authors said: “For this reason, we argue that more must be done to force jihadist content out of the mainstream.”

Many world leaders have been calling for the big internet providers and social media giants to find and strip the content from their pages. Some have called for such companies to be fined.

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