New York Daily News

Social media must stop hiding hate

- BY SCOTT RICHMAN AND BRAD HOYLMAN-SIGAL Richman is the regional director of the Anti-Defamation League for New York/New Jersey. Hoylman-Sigal represents the West Side of Manhattan in the New York State Senate and is chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee

How can we wield a tool so powerful that makes available all informatio­n at a tap of a finger and also destroys entire communitie­s? Today marks the 20th Safer Internet Day, created to promote online safety and responsibi­lity around the world. The internet can be a valuable tool bringing us closer together, but we have also experience­d the chilling ways that it divides communitie­s, and too often allows hate, disinforma­tion and extremism to quickly spread.

Less than a year ago, a teenage white supremacis­t claimed the lives of 10 innocent people in Buffalo. The gunman streamed his attack in real time on the social media platform Twitch, a video service owned by Amazon.com, and published his racist manifesto on his social media accounts. In the hours after the horrific mass shooting, we learned that the attacker had been radicalize­d on social media and promoted antisemiti­c and racist conspiracy theories on his accounts, just as we saw from the shooters in Pittsburgh, Poway, El Paso, and Charleston.

This dangerous rhetoric existed before the internet, but the influence of social media has allowed it to spread and become normalized on a stunning scale. Unchecked social media companies make it easy for bad actors to promote false claims and dangerous conspiraci­es online.

Social media companies have a responsibi­lity to ensure that their platforms do not advance disinforma­tion and hate-fueled violence. Tech giants have been hiding the depths of the problem for too long. It is past time they were held accountabl­e for their hate, disinforma­tion, and extremism problem, which is too severe to allow inaction.

Recent studies have shown that Americans overwhelmi­ngly support greater transparen­cy from social media platforms. According to data from The Anti-Defamation League, 75% of parents feel it is important for tech companies to share accurate informatio­n about the hate speech and harassment taking place on their platforms. The majority of parents also agree that the government should require social media companies to publicly report on misinforma­tion and hate speech.

Many tech companies have little to no external oversight, and it is clear that we cannot rely on them to consistent­ly self-regulate. We have seen too many acts of violence and terrorism carried out because the perpetrato­rs were radicalize­d online. Even when tech companies assure the public that they are working to moderate content and improve their practices, we continue to see gaps in enforcemen­t.

ADL’s 2022 Online Hate and Harassment Survey reports that up to 40% of users have experience­d online harassment, nearly two-thirds of which is hate-based harassment, meaning these users are being targeted because of an aspect of their identity. It’s no wonder then that ADL’s most recent Online Antisemiti­sm Report Card, which measures how well platforms respond to reports of antisemiti­c content, showed that the majority of platforms earned a grade of C or below.

As Americans consume more news and informatio­n from social media, we have to ensure that hateful conspiracy theories and glorificat­ion of white supremacis­t violence do not move further into the mainstream. Social media companies have an obligation to ensure that their platforms are no longer stronghold­s for disinforma­tion, antisemiti­sm, racism, and the promotion of hate-motivated violence.

We have a responsibi­lity to ensure everyone can safely navigate the internet. One of us is a New York State senator who has introduced legislatio­n, the Social Media Transparen­cy Act (S895), which would provide clear requiremen­ts to ensure that large social media companies are transparen­t and accountabl­e to their users, the state, and the public, for their policies, moderation practices, and how they stop hate online.

We need better insights into what steps social media platforms are taking to address hate speech, disinforma­tion and conspiracy theories, harassment, foreign interferen­ce, and incitement to violence, and we need those companies to shut down hate now. With greater transparen­cy and the data that comes with it, we will all be better equipped to understand how hateful and dangerous rhetoric spreads online, and how we can take action to prevent violence before it happens.

California has already demanded this transparen­cy, and Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a similar bill, Assembly Bill 587, into law last year. New York now has the opportunit­y to be the next state to require that social media companies stop hiding hate.

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