6 Dec 2016

Tech firms fight extremist content

4:34 pm on 6 December 2016

Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter and YouTube are collaborating to stop violent, extremist images and video being spread.

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facebook Photo: AFP

The four tech firms plan to create a database that contains 'digital fingerprints' of the content.

The database would be used to screen uploads in order to spot violent or extremist material before it is shared.

Eventually, the database would be made available to other firms keen to police this content.

"There is no place for content that promotes terrorism on our hosted consumer services," a Twitter spokesman said in a statement.

The initiative was aimed at the "most extreme and egregious" images and videos, he said.

The database would be populated with digital snapshots of images and videos known as "hashes", which were an industry standard way of uniquely indentifying a file, he added.

The hashes of content recognised as extremist or violent would be shared among the four firms, which could use them to scrub the same images from their respective sites and services.

Anyone who believed content they had posted had been incorrectly flagged as promoting terror groups would be able to appeal against its removal, the statement said.

Twitter's spokesman said the joint project would make the firms more efficient at removing content that violated their policies governing what could be posted and shared.

The tie-up between the four firms comes as the European Commission calls on US tech firms to act faster when tackling hate speech.

EU justice commissioner Vera Jourova said firms had fallen short of a commitment given six months ago in which they pledged to act within 24 hours of being told about hateful and racist content.

Brussels would introduce laws mandating swift action if tech firms did not start to respond more quickly, she said.