Texarkana Gazette

What major tech companies are doing about hate groups

- By Barbara Ortutay

NEW YORK—Major companies such as Google, Facebook and PayPal are banishing a growing cadre of extremist groups and individual­s in the wake of the deadly clash at a white-nationalis­t rally last weekend in Virginia. Civil rights advocates welcomed the moves, but say more needs to be done—and more should have been done earlier.

Here is a look at some of the technology services that have banned hate groups or have otherwise come out against white supremacis­ts and their supporters:

AIRBNB

Ahead of the rally, the housing booking service Airbnb barred rentals to people it believed were traveling to participat­e. The company said it used its existing background checks and “input from the community” to identify users who didn’t align with its standards.

APPLE

Apple is donating $2 million to two human rights groups as part of CEO Tim Cook’s pledge to help lead the fight against the hate that fueled the violence in Charlottes­ville. Apple is giving $1 million apiece to Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League. The iPhone maker also will match employee donations to those two groups and other human rights organizati­ons on a two-for-one basis.

SOCIAL MEDIA

Facebook removed several groups and individual­s from its service and Instagram for what it calls violations of terms banning hate speech. Groups included Vanguard America, Physical Removal and Genuine Donald Trump. The company uses a combinatio­n of artificial intelligen­ce and human moderators to weed out groups, posts and people that violate its policies. Spokeswoma­n Ruchika Budhraja acknowledg­es this is a difficult task, as determinin­g what is hate speech is more difficult than something like a beheading video or child pornograph­y.

Twitter, meanwhile, appears to have suspended the account for neo-Nazi site Daily Stormer, though the company doesn’t comment on individual accounts.

SERVICE PROVIDERS

The Daily Stormer’s publisher said he has been effectivel­y “banned from the internet” after mocking the victim of a deadly car attack during the protests in Charlottes­ville. Andrew Anglin said by email he is “figuring out the next step” after four domain registrati­on companies refused to service his site. GoDaddy and Google said earlier that the site violated their terms of service. After briefly reappearin­g under a Russian domain name, the site was again offline Wednesday after the security company Cloudflare Inc. dropped him as a customer, leaving the site vulnerable to hacking attacks.

Email marketing firm MailChimp said some groups had their accounts terminated after it changed its terms of service on Monday to exclude customers whose primary purpose was “inciting harm” or promoting “discrimina­tory, hateful, or harassing content.” Squarespac­e, a website service company, said it had given certain groups 48 hours to leave “in light of recent events.” Identity Evropa, a northern California hate group that helped organize participan­ts in Charlottes­ville, tweeted Monday that it had lost service from MailChimp, Squarespac­e and PayPal.

ONLINE PAYMENTS

PayPal has been removing payment accounts linked to known hate groups in the months leading up to Charlottes­ville, according to the company and a civil rights organizati­on it was working with. For example, the account for the Daily Stormer was banned several months ago. In a blog post, the company said it “strives to navigate the balance between freedom of expression and open dialogue—and the limiting and closing of sites that accept payments or raise funds to promote hate, violence and intoleranc­e.”

Online fundraisin­g sites GoFundMe and Patreon also banned people and canceled fundraiser­s associated with rightwing hate groups. GoFundMe confirmed that it removed “multiple campaigns” for James Fields, the driver accused of driving his car into protesters and killing a woman.

SPOTIFY

The music streaming service banned music it said “favors hatred or incites violence against race, religion, sexuality or the like” after it was alerted to white supremacis­t bands on its service by the music blog Digital Music News . The blog found bands identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center as white power music streaming on Spotify.

FINDING LOVE

Dating site OKCupid tweeted that it had banned white nationalis­t Christophe­r Cantwell, saying “There is no room for hate in a place where you’re looking for love.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? n This photo combo of images shows, clockwise, from upper left: a Google sign at a store in Hialeah, Fla., the Twitter app displayed on a smartphone, PayPal headquarte­rs in San Jose, Calif., and the Facebook app displayed on an iPad. It took a violent...
Associated Press n This photo combo of images shows, clockwise, from upper left: a Google sign at a store in Hialeah, Fla., the Twitter app displayed on a smartphone, PayPal headquarte­rs in San Jose, Calif., and the Facebook app displayed on an iPad. It took a violent...

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