Paris conference to seek curbs on internet terror

Men with guns in Islamic State propaganda videoImage copyright
Islamic State propaganda video

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Last year Islamic State propaganda was at its lowest levels online since 2015, Theresa May is expected to say

UK Prime Minister Theresa May will call for governments and technology companies to work together to prevent terrorist material being shared online.

Mrs May will speak at a Paris summit on online extremism, called after the Christchurch mosque attacks in March.

The gunman live-streamed the attacks in New Zealand, where 51 people died.

Mrs May said the fact that Facebook had to remove 1.5 million copies of the video was “a stark reminder that we need to do more”.

Speaking ahead of the summit, the prime minister said the tactic of live-streaming attacks “exposed gaps in our response and the need to keep pace with rapidly changing technological developments”.

She said: “My message to governments and internet companies in Paris will be that we must work together and harness our combined technical abilities to stop any sharing of hateful content of this kind.”

The summit, chaired by French President Emmanuel Macron and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, aims to co-ordinate international efforts to stop social media being used to organise and promote terrorism.

Political leaders from Europe, Canada and the Middle East will meet senior representatives from companies such as Facebook, Google and Twitter, as well as issuing a joint “call to action” to eliminate terrorist material.

Meanwhile, Facebook has announced it plans to tighten rules on live-streaming, banning people who have infringed its policies from using the feature.

It means, for example, that anyone sharing a statement from a terrorist group with no context would be blocked from using Facebook Live for a set period, such as 30 days.

The company has also pledged $7.5m (£5.8m) towards new research partnerships to automatically detect banned content, after some users bypassed existing detection systems by uploading edited versions of the Christchurch attacks.

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In her speech, Mrs May is expected to raise concerns about the threat of far-right political groups online and call for an international approach to regulation.

She is due to say that technology companies responded effectively to her call to fight propaganda from the Islamic State group, after the 2017 attacks at Westminster Bridge, Manchester Arena and London Bridge.

Last year IS propaganda was at its lowest levels online since 2015 as a result of that co-ordinated global response, she is expected to say.

Mrs May will say: “That shows us what is possible. Our work here must continue in order to keep pace with the threat. But we also need to confront the rise of the far right online.”

The UK has recently published its own plans to introduce a legal duty of care for internet companies, which would be enforced by a new independent regulator.

source: bbc.com