The Jewish Chronicle

Digital Secretary meets community leaders

- BY LEE HARPIN

Facebook must now ban Holocaust denial’

V DIGITAL AND Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden was due to meet leading Jewish communal organisati­ons on Thursday to discuss government proposals to push Facebook, Twitter and the other social media giants into taking stronger action against antisemiti­sm and hate speech online.

The minster agreed to hold the virtual talks following widespread anger in the community over the failure by Twitter and Facebook to act speedily after the Grime star Wiley posted a stream of antisemiti­c messages on the platforms.

The JC understand­s the Jewish groups were due to stress their concern that the social media companies are failing in their duty of care to protect consumers from anti-Jewish content.

Confirming the meeting, which was organised by the Jewish Leadership Council, the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport told the JC on Wednesday: “I’m looking forward to meeting with Jewish groups to discuss this very important subject and listen to their experience­s.

“The internet should be an open and tolerant place for everyone, not a space for antisemiti­sm. We’re continuing to work at pace on new legislatio­n that will make the UK the safest place in the world to be online.”

Representa­tives from the Community Security Trust, the Board of Deputies, and the Antisemiti­sm Policy Trust are all set to be in attendance.

Mr Dowden had outlined the government’s proposed Online Harms Bill last month which he said would make this government “the first in the world” to introduce laws that make social media safe and tolerant rather than “a safe space for antisemiti­sm”.

Following the outcry over rapper Wiley’s conduct, the minister said that the government must step in and “impose tough penalties” on those social media giants that fail to act against hate speech.

The JC understand­s that some communal organisati­ons are also in favour of calling for Facebook and its competitor­s to adopt the IHRA definition of antisemiti­sm.

But some communal leaders fear IHRA – which has been highly effective as a tool for government­s, councils and businesses in tackling antisemiti­sm – will not have the same impact on social media, where it is not easy to enforce.

Facebook was under further pressure this week to ban Holocaust denial from its platforms after the social media giant was accused of having a “conceptual blind spot” on the issue.

An investigat­ion by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), a UK-based counter-extremist organisati­on, has found that Facebook’s algorithm “actively promotes” Holocaust denial content by recommendi­ng pages and links to organisati­ons and individual­s who are renowned for sharing these views.

The ISD also found 36 Facebook groups with a combined 366,068 followers which are specifical­ly dedicated to Holocaust denial or which host such content.

Facebook last week announced it had banned conspiracy theories about Jewish people “controllin­g the world” – but it has been unwilling to categorise Holocaust denial as a form of hate speech.

But the Community Security Trust’s Head of Policy Dave Rich said: “Holocaust denial is not only a wrong opinion or bad history, it is an antisemiti­c conspiracy theory that claims Jews have hoaxed the entire world.

“Now that Facebook has banned antisemiti­c conspiracy theories, they must also ban Holocaust denial.”

A Facebook spokespers­on said: “We take down any post that celebrates, defends, or attempts to justify the Holocaust. The same goes for any content that mocks Holocaust victims, accuses victims of lying, spews hate, or advocates for violence against Jewish people in any way.”

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? Screens: a danger zone
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES Screens: a danger zone

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