Austin American-Statesman

Report: Amazon is being used to promote white supremacy

Books, baby clothes with racist ideas on platform, groups say.

- Mihir Zaveri ©2018 The New York Times

Two nonprofits are criticizin­g Amazon for allowing its platforms to spread white supremacy and racism, identifyin­g in a report how shoppers can buy onesies for babies stamped with alt-right images, Nazi-themed action figures and anti-Semitic books and music.

The report, which was released Friday by the Partnershi­p for Working Families and the Action Center on Race and the Economy, said Amazon’s policies allow it to bar hateful or offensive merchandis­e and content, but the policies are “weak and inadequate­ly enforced” and allow hate groups to “generate revenue, propagate their ideas and grow their movements.”

The report outlines a number of items available as of June, including a costume that makes it look as if wearers have marks around their neck from being hanged from a noose, and onesies for babies that include images of a burning cross emblazoned across the front and Pepe the Frog.

The report identified dozens of e-books being sold in Amazon Kindle formats that were published by groups labeled “hate organizati­ons” by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors extremist groups.

It also criticized Amazon’s CloudFront content delivery network for “facilitati­ng the publicatio­n and distributi­on of digital media” associated with Islamophob­ia.

As of Sunday afternoon, Amazon appeared to have removed many of the items identified in the report but others, such as a sword with Nazi symbols, remained.

“Either Amazon does not find the materials outlined in this report offensive or otherwise contrary to its policies, or it does not consistent­ly enforce its own policies,” the report said. “Amazon has been reactive, not proactive, in its response to use of its site by peddlers of hate.”

In the report, the organizati­ons asked Amazon to develop better policies for policing its platforms, to destroy hateful merchandis­e in its warehouses and to stop allowing such goods and content to be distribute­d through its services.

An Amazon spokesman said in a statement Sunday that third-party sellers that use its marketplac­e service “must follow our guidelines and those who don’t are subject to swift action including potential removal of their account.”

Amazon did not answer questions about what specific items it had removed or what measures it was tak- ing to vet other merchandis­e. The Washington Post reported that the company was working to remove neoNazi bands from its music platform.

“They’re making money, they are doing business with the people who are selling these things,” said Mariah Montgomery,campaigndi­rector for the Partnershi­p for Working Families and one of the report’s authors. “The company has tremendous resources, and some of them should be devoted to making sure they are not propping up racist organizati­ons.”

Amazon reported a net income of more than $1.6 billion in the first quarter of 2018, more than double the amount for the same period in 2017.

The debate over how emerging technologi­es are being harnessed by those looking to spread hateful or bigoted ideas has raged for decades. In 2000, Yahoo was sued because it allowed internet users in France to visit its auction sites, which sold Nazi memorabili­a.

But the debate has ramped up in recent years with an emboldenin­g of white supremacis­t and anti-Semitic groups and pressure from countries in Europe to get U.S. technology companies to crack down on hate speech, said Danielle Citron, a professor at the University of Maryland Carey School of Law and author of the book “Hate Crimes in Cyberspace.”

Nationally, the number of reported anti-Semitic incidents surged 57 percent in 2017, up to 1,986 from 1,267 in the previous year, according to the Anti-Defamation League, which linked the increase to the divisive state of U.S. politics, a rise of extremists and the effects of social media.

“This isn’t happening in a vacuum, this report,” Citron said Sunday. “It’s happening when there’s a lot of pressure on companies to remove and filter and block hate speech.”

Citron said companies are not legally liable for distributi­ng goods or merchandis­e that reflect hate, though such practices might violate a company’s policy. She said Amazon has faced less scrutiny compared with companies like Twitter and Facebook, which are rethinking their policies.

“This is a conversati­on about morals and ethics and their own terms of service,” she said.

She warned, though, about the danger of overreachi­ng. The report called on Amazon to get input from groups like the Southern Poverty Law Center to help it monitor and react to hate groups, but the center itself has faced criticism about how it classifies extremism and hate.

“Unless we’re really discipline­d in how we define it, with examples, and we err on the side of narrow, it can grow in ways that are unintended,” Citron said.

 ?? BRYAN ANSELM / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2017 ?? A New Jersey Amazon warehouse. As of Sunday afternoon, Amazon appeared to have removed many of the items in the report.
BRYAN ANSELM / THE NEW YORK TIMES 2017 A New Jersey Amazon warehouse. As of Sunday afternoon, Amazon appeared to have removed many of the items in the report.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States