Wednesday, July 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

Tech Insiders: Firms Implemented Plans To Stem Spread Of Grisly Video After Syria Beheading

Lori Hinnant, Darpan, 03 Sep, 2014 02:17 PM
    PARIS - Tech companies drafted plans to scrub the web after a grisly video showing the beheading of an American journalist by Islamic State militants - and implemented them this week after a second killing, a Silicon Valley insider said Wednesday.
     
    Video showing the death of James Foley last month ricocheted through social networks in what many feared was a propaganda coup for the extremists. The tech official said a YouTube video on Tuesday showing another beheading - of American journalist Steven Sotloff - was deleted, slowing the spread of posts linking to it. Companies have been grappling with increasing pressure to impose more censorship on the web and according to the terms of service of many social media firms, the posting of threats and violent content is cause for suspension.
     
    The official, who spoke only on condition of anonymity because the company had not authorized speaking to the media on the record, would not say whether the developments came at the request of governments or ordinary users.
     
    But after Foley's death, "platforms were better prepared for it this time around," the official said, adding that tech companies are trying to force out the Islamic State group "platform by platform."
     
    Accounts on YouTube, Twitter and other sites were closed within hours of the video's release.
     
    An official with another major technology company said his organization worked to close multiple accounts quickly after the Sotloff video appeared. That official spoke on condition of anonymity for the same reasons.
     
    Even on Diaspora, a decentralized social network that does not exert centralized control over content, Islamic State militants are now often greeted with banners saying they are unwelcome. But they will find newly sophisticated ways to get a message out, according to Jamie Bartlett of the Demos think-tank.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Terrorism a diplomatic asset: Fair is foul, foul is fair

    Terrorism a diplomatic asset: Fair is foul, foul is fair
    The ISIS threat has been around for months. Why was it not nipped in the bud? Obama’s response in the course of a conversation with Thomas Friedman...

    Terrorism a diplomatic asset: Fair is foul, foul is fair

    Political deadlock persists in Pakistan as army plays 'facilitator'

    Political deadlock persists in Pakistan as army plays 'facilitator'
    The talks between the government and representatives of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) failed to break...

    Political deadlock persists in Pakistan as army plays 'facilitator'

    Mysteries of space dust unlocked

    Mysteries of space dust unlocked
    A new analysis of space dust has revealed that the cosmic particles, wich are likely to have originated from beyond our solar system, are more complex in composition...

    Mysteries of space dust unlocked

    Pakistan government ready to file FIR against Sharif

    Pakistan government ready to file FIR against Sharif
    The Pakistan government Thursday said it was ready to lodge a first information report (FIR) against Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, among others, in Lahore's Model...

    Pakistan government ready to file FIR against Sharif

    Shooting instructor killed as girl accidentally shoots in US

    Shooting instructor killed as girl accidentally shoots in US
    A shooting instructor was killed after a nine-year-old girld accidentally shot in the head at a gun range in the US, media reported Thursday....

    Shooting instructor killed as girl accidentally shoots in US

    Hindu temple may be razed in Pakistan

    Hindu temple may be razed in Pakistan
    A 79-year old Hindu temple in Rawalpindi may be razed to make way for an educational and housing complex, a media report said Thursday....

    Hindu temple may be razed in Pakistan