The Asian Age

After Facebook, Google steps up efforts to block ‘extremism’

Tech giant to use more resources to suppress videos used for terror activities

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Washington: Google is stepping up its efforts to block “extremist and terrorism-related videos” over its platforms, using a combinatio­n of technology and human monitors.

The measures announced on Sunday come on the heels of similar efforts unveiled by Facebook last week, and follow a call by the Group of Seven leaders last month for the online giants to do more to curb online extremist content. “While we and others have worked for years to identify and remove content that violates our policies, the uncomforta­ble truth is that we, as an industry, must acknowledg­e that more needs to be done,” said a blog post by Google general counsel Kent Walker. He said Google would devote more resources to apply artificial intelligen­ce to suppress YouTube videos used in support of extremist actions.

“This can be challengin­g: a video of a terrorist attack may be informativ­e news reporting if broadcast by the BBC, or glorificat­ion of violence if uploaded in a different context by a different user,” he said.

“We will now devote more engineerin­g resources to apply our most advanced machine learning research to train new ‘content classifier­s’ to help us more quickly identify and remove extremist and terrorism-related content.”

Google acknowledg­ed that technology alone cannot solve the problem, and said that it would “greatly increase the number of independen­t experts” on the watch for videos that violate its guidelines.”

Machines can help identify problemati­c videos, but human experts still play a role in nuanced decisions about the line between violent propaganda and religious or newsworthy speech,” Walker said. Google plans to add

The measures follow a call by the Group of Seven leaders last month for the online giants to do more to curb online extremist content

50 non-government organisati­ons to the 63 it already works with to filter inappropri­ate content.”

This allows us to benefit from the expertise of specialise­d organisati­ons working on issues like hate speech, self-harm, and terrorism,” Walker wrote. “We will also expand our work with counter-extremist groups to help identify content that may be being used to radicalize and recruit extremists.” A similar initiative was announced last week by Facebook, which earlier this year said it is adding 3,000 staff to track and remove violent content. Google’s Walker said the company would start taking “a tougher stance on videos that do not clearly violate our policies, including videos that “contain inflammato­ry religious or supremacis­t content.”

 ?? — AP ?? Google has said that it will train more workers, called content classifier­s, to identify and remove extremist and terrorism-related content faster.
— AP Google has said that it will train more workers, called content classifier­s, to identify and remove extremist and terrorism-related content faster.

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