The Palm Beach Post

Internet extremism and how to combat it

- By Dee-Ann Durbin Associated Press

DETROIT — In the wake of Britain’s third major attack in three months, Prime Minister Theresa May called on internet companies to do more to block extremist groups who use the web to recruit members and send coded messages.

Here’s a look at terrorism on the web, what’s being done to stop it and what could come next.

Q. What are technology companies doing to make sure extremist videos and other terrorist content doesn’t spread across the internet?

A. Internet companies use technology plus teams of human reviewers to flag and remove posts from people who engage in terrorist activity or express support for terrorism. Google, for example, says it employs thousands of people to fight abuse on its platforms.

Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter and YouTube late last year teamed up to create a shared industry database of unique digital fingerprin­ts for images and videos that are produced by or support terrorist organizati­ons. Those fingerprin­ts help the companies more quickly identify and remove terrorist content on the web. After the terror attack on Westminste­r Bridge in London in March, Google and other tech companies also agreed to form a joint group to accelerate anti-terrorism efforts.

Twitter says in the last six months of 2016, it suspended a total of 376,890 accounts for violations related to the promotion of terrorism. Three-quarters of those were found through Twitter’s internal tools; just 2 percent were taken down because of government requests, the company says.

Facebook says it alerts law enforcemen­t if it sees a threat of an imminent attack or harm to someone. It also seeks out potential terrorist accounts by tracing the “friends” of an account that has been removed for terrorism.

Q. What are technology companies refusing to do when it comes to terrorist content?

A. After the 2015 mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, and again after the Westminste­r Bridge attack, the U.S. and U.K. government­s sought access to encrypted — or password-protected — communicat­ion between the terrorists who carried out the attack. In both cases, the tech companies involved — Apple and WhatsApp — refused, although the government­s eventually managed to go around the companies and get the informatio­n they wanted.

Tech companies say encryption is vital and compromisi­ng it won’t just stop terrorists. Encryption also protects bank accounts, credit card transactio­ns and all kinds of other informatio­n that people want to keep private. But others — including former FBI Director James Comey and Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California — have argued that the inability to access encrypted data is a threat to security. Feinstein has introduced a bill to give the government so-called “back door” access to encrypted data.

Q. Shouldn’t tech companies be forced to share encrypted informatio­n if it could protect national security?

A. Richard Forno, who directs the graduate cybersecur­ity program at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, said weakening encryption won’t make people safer. Terrorists will simply take their communicat­ions deeper undergroun­d by developing their own cyber channels or even reverting to paper notes sent by couriers, he said.

“It’s playing whack-amole,” he said. “The bad guys are not constraine­d by the law. That’s why they’re bad guys.”

But Erik Gordon, a professor of law and business at the University of Michigan, says society has sometimes determined that in times of war, the government can intrude in ways it might not normally. He imagines a system where law enforcemen­t would have to ask a judge for a warrant to retrieve encrypted informatio­n.

“If we get to the point where we say, ‘Privacy is not as important as staying alive,’ I think there will be some setup which will allow the government to breach privacy,” he said.

Q. Is it really the tech companies’ job to police the internet and remove content?

A. Tech companies have accepted that this is part of their mission. In a Facebook post earlier this year,

Mark Zuckerberg said the company was developing artificial intelligen­ce so its computers can tell the difference between news stories about terrorism and terrorist propaganda. “This is technicall­y difficult as it requires building AI that can read and understand news, but we need to work on this to help fight terrorism worldwide,” Zuckerberg said.

But Ross Anderson, a professor of security engineerin­g at the University of Cambridge, says blaming Facebook or Google for the spread of terrorism is like blaming the mail system or the phone company for Irish Republican Army violence 30 years ago. Anderson says that instead of working together to censor the internet, government­s and companies should focus on working together to share informatio­n more quickly.

Former Secretary of State John Kerry also worries about placing too much blame on the internet instead of the underlying causes of violence.

“The bottom line is that in too many places, in too many parts of the world, you’ve got a large gap between governance and people and between the opportunit­ies those people have,” Kerry said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

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