All Tech Giants to Use Govt Intel List to Police Content, Includes Far-Right Terrorist Groups: Report






 A private counterterrorism group formed by the world’s biggest tech companies, including Facebook, Google, and Microsoft, will use lists produced by government intelligence agencies to police content by far-right extremist terrorist organizations, it said in a report.


The database maintained by the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism (GIFCT) has, until recently, focused on videos and images from terrorist groups on a United Nations list, and so has largely consisted of content from Islamist extremist organizations such as ISIS, al Qaeda, and the Taliban.


According to the report released on its website this month, the group said it would target “Five Eyes designated far-right extremist terrorist organizations.”






The group told Reuters that it will now vastly expand its the database using lists generated by Five Eyes—an alliance of government intelligence agencies comprised of Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States—to target white supremacists and militias, including groups like the Proud Boys, the Three Percenters, and neo-Nazis.


GIFCT did not immediately respond to a request for more details or for a comment on its cooperation with Five Eyes.


The members of GIFCT share “hashes,” unique numerical representations of original pieces of content that have been removed from their services. Other platforms use these to identify the same content on their own sites in order to review or remove it.


Fourteen companies can access the GIFCT database on removed content, including Reddit, Snapchat-owner Snap, Facebook-owned Instagram, Verizon Media, Microsoft’s LinkedIn, and the file-sharing service Dropbox. The group recently added home-rental giant Airbnb and email marketing company Mailchimp as members.






GIFCT has faced criticism and concerns from some human and digital rights groups over centralized or over-broad censorship.


“This expansion of the GIFCT hash database only intensifies the need for GIFCT to improve the transparency and accountability of these content-blocking resources,” Emma Llanso, director of free expression at the Center for Democracy and Technology, said in a statement. “As the database expands, the risks of mistaken takedown only increase.”


GIFCT’s Executive Director Nicholas Rasmussen said that “over-achievement in this takes you in the direction of violating someone’s rights on the internet to engage in free expression.”


Tech giants came together to create GIFCT in 2017 under pressure from U.S. and European governments after a series of deadly attacks in Paris and Brussels. Its database mostly contains digital fingerprints of videos and images related to groups on the U.N. Security Council’s consolidated sanctions list and a few specific live-streamed attacks, such as the 2019 mosque shootings in Christchurch, New Zealand.(Reuters)






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