A software
tool has unveiled its aim to help online firms quickly find and eliminate
extremist content used to spread and incite violence and attacks.
The Counter Extremism Project, a non-government group based
in Washington, proposed its software be used in a system similar to one used to
prevent the spread on online child pornography.
The software was developed by Dartmouth University computer
scientist Hany Farid, who also worked on the PhotoDNA system now widely used by
Internet companies to stop the spread of content showing sexual exploitation or
pornography involving children.
But social media firms have yet to commit to using the tool
for extremist content, and some are skeptical about it, according to an
industry source.
The announcement comes amid growing concerns about radical
jihadists using social networks to diffuse violent and gruesome content and
recruit people for attacks.
“We think this is the technological solution to combat
online extremism,” said Mark Wallace, chief executive of the organization that
includes former diplomats and public officials from the United States and other
countries.
The group proposed the creation of an independent “National
Office for Reporting Extremism” that would operate in a similar fashion to the
child pornography center—identifying and flagging certain content to enable
online firms to automatically remove it.
This system, if adopted by Internet firms, would go a long
way to making sure than online extremist is no longer pervasive,” Wallace said
during a conference call with journalists.
He said it could be useful in stopping the “viral” spread of
videos of beheadings and killings such as those produced by the Islamic State
group.
Wallace said he expects “robust debate” on what is acceptable
content but added that “I think we could agree that the beheading videos, the
drowning videos, the torture videos... should be removed.”
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