Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Extremists using YouTube less

- By Natalia Drozdiak Bloomberg News

The use of YouTube as a destinatio­n from which to spread jihadi terrorist propaganda online is dramatical­ly declining, according to an intelligen­ce group that tracks online extremism.

New analysis of web links, conducted by the Site Intelligen­ce Group, suggests Islamic State and al-Qaida continue to value the file-hosting services of Dropbox, Google Drive and Google Photos, however, and remain among the top-used services to store battle footage, documentar­y-style production­s and video speeches.

Once uploaded, links to this content typically are disseminat­ed on social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Telegram Messenger to reach as wide an audience as possible.

Will McCants, Google’s lead on counter-extremism, said he was “pleased to see this report detail the strong progress made on YouTube in tackling terrorist content.”

He said Google was using the latest advances in machine learning to stamp out terrorist content across all its services. “There’s more to do, but we’re laserfocus­ed on getting this right across the board.”

The report by Site, which analyzed more than 27,000 web links between April 1 and Aug. 31 this year, comes as the European Union pushes for new legislatio­n to force internet companies to wipe terror content from their services within an hour of being notified of it.

They may face fines if they fail to do so.

Site’s analysis echoes research published by New York-based Flashpoint in May, which suggested Islamic State had been more frequently utilizing preserved versions of web pages on archival websites and online locker services.

Big tech platforms have made strides in recent months in their efforts to tackle terror content.

Those efforts have resulted in “a dramatic shift away from YouTube” by the terror groups, according to Site, leading the groups to increase reliance on other Google services.

The jihadi groups seek to stay a step ahead of content deletions by proliferat­ing their propaganda across a variety of filehostin­g platforms. The trend highlights the game of whack-a-mole that web firms and authoritie­s must play in order to keep on top of the terror groups’ activities online.

“These organizati­ons are extremely adaptable,” Site director Rita Katz said. “When one platform takes initiative to remove content, they have scores of other hosts to exploit.”

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