The Herald (South Africa)

Facebook friend suggestion­s blamed for linking extremists

- Martin Evans

FACEBOOK has helped introduce thousands of Islamic State (IS) extremists to one another via its “suggested friends” feature.

The social media giant – under fire for failing to remove terrorist material – is now accused of connecting jihadists around the world, allowing them to develop fresh networks and recruit new members.

Researcher­s, who analysed the Facebook activities of 1 000 IS supporters in 96 countries, discovered users with radical Islamist sympathies were routinely introduced to one another by the “suggested friends” feature.

Using sophistica­ted algorithms, Facebook connects people who share interests. The site automatica­lly collects personal informatio­n, which is used to direct people towards others they might wish to connect with.

But without effective checks on what informatio­n is shared, terrorists are able to exploit the site to communicat­e with supporters.

The extent to which the feature is helping IS members on Facebook is shown in a new study, the findings of which will be published in a Counter Extremism Project report this month.

Gregory Waters, a report author, described how he was bombarded by suggestion­s for pro-IS friends, after making contact with one active extremist on the site.

Robert Postings, his fellow researcher, was inundated with friend suggestion­s for dozens of extremists within hours of clicking on news stories about an Islamist uprising in the Philippine­s.

“This project has laid bare Facebook’s inability or unwillingn­ess to efficientl­y address extremist content. The fact that its own algorithm is directly facilitati­ng the spread of this terrorist group on its site is beyond unacceptab­le,” Waters said.

A Facebook spokesman said: “There is no place for terrorists on Facebook. We work aggressive­ly to ensure that we do not have terrorists or terror groups using the site.” – The Telegraph

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