Mail & Guardian

FBI’s gullible goat slips up on jihadi slope

- Steve Rose

I’m a susceptibl­e goat speeding down the path to Islamic extremism, but first I must negotiate the green-andgrey blocks of infidel propaganda. No, wait; I’m a radicalise­d goat, hell-bent on jihad, but my extremist beliefs are threatened by green-andgrey blocks of debate.

Or could it be that I’m trying to master the FBI’s almost unplayable — it’s almost as infuriatin­g as Flappy Bird — new online anti-extremism game, which involves manoeuvrin­g a wayward goat through an obstacle course whose metaphoric­al intent is all but unfathomab­le?

The game, titled Slippery Slope, is supposed to educate impression­able children on “the distorted logic of blame that can lead a person into violent extremism”, but it’s also indicative of how clueless government­s can be when it comes to reaching out to the younger generation.

Slippery Slope is part of an online initiative launched by the FBI called Don’t Be a Puppet: Pull Back the Curtain on Violent Extremism, which uses games and quizzes to inform young people about radicalisa­tion.

As the title suggests, there are more metaphors to unmangle here: a wooden mannequin bound by strings, for example, which you can free by visiting all the site’s sections; rendered as rooms of a confusing family home.

“We want teens to apply their critical thinking skills to this issue,” said an FBI spokesman.

“The FBI made a video game and it sucks,” declared gaming site Kotaku. “Everything about this site screams awful, out-of-touch 1990s educationa­l game,” complained design and technology blog Gizmodo.

This isn’t the first attempt to counter the problem of online radicalisa­tion. But compared with the relatively sophistica­ted methods of Islamic State, whose propaganda techniques include slick recruitmen­t videos and intensive social-media grooming, government­s are banging their goats against a grey-green wall.

A Radicalisa­tion Awareness Informatio­n Kit issued to Australian schools last year was roundly ridiculed for drawing a direct line between violent extremism and “listening to alternativ­e music”.

Similarly, the United Kingdom’s new Educate Against Hate website, launched last month, includes among its “warning signs” such behaviour as “excessive time spent online or on mobile phones” and “significan­t change of appearance and/or clothing” — also known as normal teenage behaviour.

Can game developers do any better? Fighting fire with fire doesn’t seem to be working. Grand Theft Auto was appropriat­ed as a jihadi recruitmen­t ad. Perhaps the West’s greatest online riposte was the 2014 hit, Goat Simulator, in which the player controls, yes, a goat on the rampage across suburbia. It was mindlessly pointless, educationa­lly worthless and guiltily amusing — all the hallmarks of the healthy democracy we seek to defend. And the graphics were a lot better than the FBI’s. — © Guardian News & Media 2016

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