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Author Topic: Tech Giants Vow to Tackle Online Hate Speech Within 24 Hours  (Read 932 times)
Wilikon (OP)
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May 31, 2016, 03:03:50 PM
 #1






U.S. Internet giants Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc., Google and Microsoft Corp. pledged to tackle online hate speech in less than 24 hours as part of a joint commitment with the European Union to combat the use of social media by terrorists.

Beyond national laws that criminalize hate speech, there is a need to ensure such activity by Internet users is “expeditiously reviewed by online intermediaries and social media platforms, upon receipt of a valid notification, in an appropriate time-frame,” the companies and the European Commission said in a joint statement on Tuesday.

The code of conduct arrives as Europe comes to terms with the bloody attacks in Paris and Brussels by Islamic State, which has used the Web and social media to spread its message of hate against its enemies. The companies said it remains a “challenge” to strike the right balance between freedom of expression and hate speech in the self-generated content on online platforms.

“We remain committed to letting the Tweets flow,” said Twitter’s head of public policy for Europe, Karen White, in the statement. “However, there is a clear distinction between freedom of expression and conduct that incites violence and hate.”
Platforms Sued

A French Jewish youth group, UEJF, sued Twitter, Facebook and Google in Paris this month over how they monitor hate speech on the web. In the course of about six weeks in April and May, members of French anti-discrimination groups flagged unambiguous hate speech that they said promoted racism, homophobia or anti-Semitism. More than 90 percent of the posts pointed out to Twitter and YouTube remained online within 15 days on average following requests for removal, according to the study by UEJF, SOS Racisme and SOS Homophobie.

“With a global community of 1.6 billion people we work hard to balance giving people the power to express themselves whilst ensuring we provide a respectful environment,” said Monika Bickert, head of global policy management at Facebook, in the statement. “There’s no place for hate speech on Facebook.”



http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-05-31/tech-giants-vow-to-tackle-online-hate-speech-within-24-hours


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May 31, 2016, 03:04:56 PM
 #2




EU links up with Twitter, tech firms to combat hate speech



 BRUSSELS (AP) -- The European Union reached an agreement Tuesday with some of the world's biggest social media firms, including Facebook and Twitter, on ways to combat the spread of hate speech online.

Under the terms of a code of conduct, the firms, which also include YouTube and Microsoft, have committed to "quickly and efficiently" tackle illegal hate speech directed against anyone over issues of race, color, religion, descent or national or ethnic origin. The sites have often been used by terrorist organizations to relay messages and entice hatred against certain individuals or groups.

Among the measures agreed with the EU's executive arm, the firms have said they will establish internal procedures and staff training to guarantee that a majority of illegal content is assessed and, where necessary, removed within 24 hours. They have also agreed to strengthen their partnerships with civil society organizations who often flag content that promotes incitement to violence and hateful conduct. The European Commission and the firms have also agreed to support civil society organizations to deliver "anti-hate campaigns."

"The internet is a place for free speech, not hate speech," said Vera Jourova, the EU commissioner responsible for justice, consumers and gender equality. She added that the code of conduct, which will be regularly reviewed in terms of its scope and its impact, will ensure that public incitement to violence to hatred has "no place online."

The firms themselves say there's no conflict between their mission statements to promote the freedom of expression and clamping down on hate speech.

Twitter, which has been at the center of much of the hate speech that's spread online over the past few years, says it will continue to tackle the issue "head-on" along with partners in industry and civil society.

"We remain committed to letting the Tweets flow," said Twitter's European head of public policy Karen White. "However, there is a clear distinction between freedom of expression and conduct that incites violence and hate."

And Facebook's head of global policy management Monika Bickert urged the company's 1.6 million users to use the site's in-built reporting tools in the event they find content they consider unacceptable.

"Our teams around the world review these reports around the clock and take swift action," she said.


http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/E/EU_EUROPE_HATE_SPEECH?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2016-05-31-08-44-12


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May 31, 2016, 03:21:37 PM
 #3

So we're not allowed to opening hate ISIS anymore?

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May 31, 2016, 03:35:18 PM
 #4

Guarantee you this will be selectively enforced as it always is and they won't do a damn thing about Muslims and SJWs spamming anti-semitism, I fucking hate all of these people with a passion.

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However, there is a clear distinction between freedom of expression and conduct that incites violence and hate.

There is, but you don't follow that distinction at all.
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May 31, 2016, 03:38:55 PM
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Internet 2.0 is coming, thanks to them apparently.


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May 31, 2016, 03:39:38 PM
 #6

They'll probably do this using an algorithm that searches for "trigger" terms. Which will result in people substituting/inventing other words and just carrying on...

 
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May 31, 2016, 03:43:30 PM
 #7

I fucking hate all of these people with a passion.
Oh dear, just been red flagged for inciting hate online.  Cheesy

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May 31, 2016, 03:49:08 PM
 #8




How long before bitcointalk.org is targeted as a hate site?


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May 31, 2016, 03:49:46 PM
 #9

I fucking hate all of these people with a passion.
Oh dear, just been red flagged for inciting hate online.  Cheesy


The sad thing is I probably could go to jail for that if someone wanted it enough and they were of the right demographic, this kind of thing is definitely making me want to leave the UK even if the leave side of the EU referendum wins, my country is such a shit hole for this type of thing.
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May 31, 2016, 06:06:54 PM
 #10

How long before bitcointalk.org is targeted as a hate site?

Most probably it is already flagged as a hate site. Not sure about it though... need to check with those Southern Poverty Law Center guys and Reverend Pussy Jackson. Still it doesn't make much of a difference. I am living in a country where the freedom of speech is guaranteed (although I am not sure for how long it will stay like that).
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May 31, 2016, 06:13:08 PM
 #11

How long before bitcointalk.org is targeted as a hate site?

Most probably it is already flagged as a hate site. Not sure about it though... need to check with those Southern Poverty Law Center guys and Reverend Pussy Jackson. Still it doesn't make much of a difference. I am living in a country where the freedom of speech is guaranteed (although I am not sure for how long it will stay like that).


We know lots of projects are in labs all over the world for the next decentralized social network. Lots of very, very smart folks are surfing on bitcointalk. I hope the bitcointalk.org gods are working hard on 2.0 right now because things will change for the worse for freedom of speech.


Isn't time the ones with a forward vision start looking for a backup instead of waiting for them to come after us?


http://www.worthofweb.com/website-value/bitcointalk.org/


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May 31, 2016, 06:27:34 PM
 #12

Saw something similar about trolling and thought that was overreaching due to the fact they would not have context or idea of conversation flow to out right know who is trolling and most likely will be abused.

As usual the premise is good but I fear the way it will be enforced will be strategic or lacking against certain groups. How can they crack down on hate when its part of ones religion?

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May 31, 2016, 07:20:38 PM
 #13

Saw something similar about trolling and thought that was overreaching due to the fact they would not have context or idea of conversation flow to out right know who is trolling and most likely will be abused.

As usual the premise is good but I fear the way it will be enforced will be strategic or lacking against certain groups. How can they crack down on hate when its part of ones religion?


Ask yourself who will be the supreme justice warriors...


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May 31, 2016, 07:23:48 PM
 #14

My soul has just been threatened with eternal damnation in a lake of boiling fire and brimstone if I don't believe in a certain God.

Where do I report this hate speech crime?

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May 31, 2016, 07:29:36 PM
 #15

My soul has just been threatened with eternal damnation in a lake of boiling fire and brimstone if I don't believe in a certain God.

Where do I report this hate speech crime?


The feminist hotline.


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May 31, 2016, 08:46:32 PM
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Wilikon (OP)
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May 31, 2016, 09:02:29 PM
 #17






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June 01, 2016, 12:08:40 AM
 #18

Censorship is already taking place on many topics such as drugs or weapon trade, but it did not stop it from occurring. On the contrary, they create separate systems to communicate. 

I think therefore, it is very dangerous to do this kind of censorship. Not because the "message" may not be dangerous, but that the people will stop from using those systems (Facebook, Twitter, Microsoft, Google) for communication altogether.

What is your opinion?

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June 01, 2016, 02:48:21 AM
 #19

Not because the "message" may not be dangerous, but that the people will stop from using those systems (Facebook, Twitter, Microsoft, Google) for communication altogether.

What is your opinion?

Nope. Most of the people simply don't care about the censorship. Only a few middle-aged white males may make some noise over it, and they are a small minority. The others are not much bothered. They will go on with their lives. Facebook is having almost 1.6 billion users as of now, and they won't worry much if one or two million leave.
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June 01, 2016, 02:58:48 AM
 #20

Not because the "message" may not be dangerous, but that the people will stop from using those systems (Facebook, Twitter, Microsoft, Google) for communication altogether.

What is your opinion?

Nope. Most of the people simply don't care about the censorship. Only a few middle-aged white males may make some noise over it, and they are a small minority. The others are not much bothered. They will go on with their lives. Facebook is having almost 1.6 billion users as of now, and they won't worry much if one or two million leave.

Do not care,meaning they will not be bothered to fight for it,but if asked I think people would rather not have censorship issues. Be interesting to see if the numbers fluctuate even a little when these companies get hit with
stories that show them to be restrictive in nature!

When something comes along and it will eventually,the down fall will be swift like a punch to the gut.

Since 9/11 its beens a slow grind on the people to give up more rights and lately it feels like its been turned up a notch.

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June 01, 2016, 03:13:44 AM
 #21




Tracking not allowed (unless you’re Google)



As more of our lives take place online, privacy has become a huge national concern: one survey last year found that more than 90 percent of Americans feel they’ve lost control over how their personal information is collected and used on the Internet. And a sizeable majority wants government to help them get control back by regulating what online companies are doing with their data.

Though most people don’t realize it, such an effort is already underway. Largely behind the scenes, a small group at the Internet’s main standards body has been asked by the Federal Trade Commission to craft a new “Do Not Track” policy for online data, similar to the “Do Not Call” registry that helped reduce the nuisance of telemarketers.

Since 2011, the group has been working on recommendations for a simple mechanism for consumers to express their privacy preferences to the broad range of companies that now get access to their data. But what started as a group effort by technology companies and privacy experts to craft a new type of consumer protection has quietly changed, and today has morphed into a committee where a few of the most powerful Internet firms are deciding on the rules of the game.

In July the group finally posted a draft of their proposed Do Not Track standard; the public comment period ends next Wednesday, Oct. 7. A look at the details of the draft reveals that the proposed rule will apply to everyone—everyone, that is, except the companies that already collect most of the personal data on the Internet, and which helped write the rule.

Clearly, that’s not a bad outcome for the Internet giants like Google and Facebook: exempt themselves, and cement their status as the world’s largest collectors of user information online. But this is a far cry from what the FTC intended the process to do. What started as a tool intended to increase consumer protection now looks more like a way for the big players to limit competition. But the rule still isn’t final, and a closer look at what’s actually happening with the standard gives us a chance to fix it—and even imagine a fairer new version that would protect both consumers and competition.

THE “DO NOT TRACK” program started with a good idea. In 2007, several consumer advocacy groups approached the FTC and asked it to create a national Do Not Track list. Done right, the thinking went, Do Not Track could be simple: once you added yourself to the list, Internet companies would have to abide by your data preferences. The consumer advocates started with the premise that, in the words of a former FTC leader, “Internet businesses are not free to help themselves to the resources of a consumer’s computer.”

In 2010, the FTC issued a staff report endorsing a mechanism to give consumers choice in online tracking.  The FTC’s goal, then and later, was to allow consumers to decide “whether to allow the collection and use of data regarding their online searching and browsing activities.”  The FTC decided that the most practical method would likely involve the placement of a persistent setting, similar to a cookie, on the consumer’s browser. The setting was nicknamed “Do Not Track.”   

How would it work in practice? It seemed to make sense to have industry help figure it out: technological change happens quickly, and there was no sense in the FTC creating a Do Not Track requirement that would be obsolete by the time it was announced. The FTC endorsed the notion of having industry create a new Do Not Track standard, and the World-Wide Web Consortium—the influential standards body at the heart of the Web—set up a working group to get it done.

Unfortunately, the W3C’s effort quickly degenerated. A string of high-profile privacy experts and other participants stepped back from the working group. The group established and then ignored countless deadlines, with one key figure describing the mess as an agonizing series of fruitless meetings and emails: “We first met to discuss Do Not Track over 2 years ago.  We have now held 10 in-person meetings and 78 conference calls. We have exchanged 7,148 emails.  And those boggling figures reflect just the official fora. The group remains at an impasse.” By October 2013, prominent privacy and consumer advocates had lost confidence in the process and suggested that the working group be disbanded.

Most industry watchers wrote it off as a failure and walked away. But not everyone. The Internet giants with the largest stake in the final outcome—including companies like Google, Yahoo, Facebook, and Comcast, which collect the vast majority of user data—stayed in the meetings, and pushed ahead. They positioned their own representatives in leadership roles.

Now the process is finally reaching its conclusion. In July, the Tracking Protection Working Group quietly posted a statement on its website announcing that it had reached “Last Call,” triggering a comment period before the standard’s major features will be finalized. There was good reason for them to bury the news: Under the proposed standard, some of the Internet’s largest purveyors of personal data would be granted wide latitude to ignore any “Do Not Track” signal on their own sites and across the Internet.

Here’s how the rule would work. The proposed Do Not Track standard distinguishes between “first parties,” companies with a consumer-facing online presence, and “third parties,” companies that facilitate online ads displayed on other companies’ websites and online applications.  If a user navigates to a website, the site itself is a first party; given the broad definition of first party, so is the user’s Internet browser and even the users’ ISP. If a user has activated “Do Not Track,” the proposed rule would allow first parties to continue tracking their online activity and other personal data, but would ban third parties from doing the same.

This distinction makes sense in the world of telemarketing; it means that the phone company can use your information to help deliver service, but blocks marketers from using it to sell you things. The problem is that the Internet is different: many of the largest Internet giants are both first and third parties, collecting the data on the technological front end, and then using it for their own business purposes later. And the proposed rule would exempt their entire operations from “Do Not Track.” So, when a user activates the Do Not Track signal, if he or she enters a query into the Google search engine, signs onto to Gmail, or uses Google Chrome or Android, he or she will still be allowing Google to gather information and use it to deliver targeted ads.

From the perspective of the world’s largest Internet companies (and advertising companies), the main function of the new standard won’t be to limit data collection: it will be to limit the ability of any potential rivals to collect comparable data. What started as consumer protection has ended up a barrier to competition—a moat protecting the very companies that gather the most user data on the Internet.

THE ALTERNATIVE IS to take another road. The FTC originally issued the call for a Do Not Track regime, and it now needs to reassert itself in the process to ensure the project it started does not end up undermining both consumer privacy and the online advertising competition that is critical to the health of the Internet.

Thankfully, there are a few promising signs that this rethink may be happening. Just this week, speaking to the online advertising community, FTC Commissioner Julie Brill criticized the process for languishing, and called for “robust and innovative tools to address this demand in a sophisticated way. Not to find ways around consumer choice, but to provide consumers with something they clearly want: to see advertising that respects their privacy and that they can trust."

A bigger step would be for Congress to pass a bill that would bridge the gap between the privacy community and the legitimate concerns of advertisers who keep the Internet humming. In her speech, the FTC commissioner pointed to the rise of ad blockers—which prevent many advertisers from collecting data, but in an ad-hoc way—as a powerful incentive to craft such a standard that is simple and comprehensive.

There are important interests to balance here. On one side, consumers deserve protection and more transparency about how their data is being used; at the same time, data-fueled advertising is a big part of the model that keeps the economic engine of the Internet humming, and allows all of us to access free content and tools.

What we can’t do is let the biggest players write the rules alone. Google and Facebook are among the largest vacuum cleaners of data (Google has more data than the NSA) and, through acquisitions, are also the largest pipelines for online advertising.  Their gatekeeper status makes the issue of a fair and independent Do Not Track even more critical. 

It’s easy to see this as a choice between consumer protection and competition, but that’s a false divide. Giving consumers more choice about their privacy could actually help a new kind of “privacy competition” develop.  And a standard that doesn’t unfairly close the gates on smaller competitors would also help advertising competition increase. A decisive and evenhanded new standard would help catalyze this revolution, not limit it.



http://www.politico.com/agenda/story/2015/10/tracking-not-allowed-unless-youre-google-000261




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June 01, 2016, 03:41:33 AM
 #22

Since 9/11 its beens a slow grind on the people to give up more rights and lately it feels like its been turned up a notch.

In the past also, terrorist attacks were used to justify the government agencies spying upon people. The indifference from the part of the citizens encourage the authorities to take even bolder steps. As things stand right now, the right to privacy doesn't exist in any of the Western nations, perhaps with the exception of Switzerland.
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June 01, 2016, 03:43:56 AM
 #23

And a sizeable majority wants government to help them get control back by regulating what online companies are doing with their data.

This pretty much sums up everything that is wrong with the world today.

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June 01, 2016, 04:01:44 AM
 #24

i dont understand how that is possible to tackle this issue. they could block certain words for sure, other than that i dont think so they could monitor everything  Wink lets see how they are going to tackle this thing without any issue. since its a fine balance between freedom of speech
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June 01, 2016, 06:53:34 AM
 #25

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However, there is a clear distinction between freedom of expression and conduct that incites violence and hate.

Since when is inciting hate a crime? What if an individual or organization SHOULD be hated? There are plenty. They are simply using the pre-programmed reaction to the words "hate" speech and mixing it up in a word salad to make hate = violence, and therefore equivalent to a criminal act. Everyone should be telling everyone they know about this and spamming the fuck out of each of these platforms over it. When they are forced with either removing a large percentage of their user base (and revenue) or backing down, they WILL back down. If they don't they will end up like Twitter or Target with investors fleeing like rats from a sinking ship.
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June 01, 2016, 07:00:14 AM
 #26

Quote
However, there is a clear distinction between freedom of expression and conduct that incites violence and hate.

Since when is inciting hate a crime? What if an individual or organization SHOULD be hated? There are plenty. They are simply using the pre-programmed reaction to the words "hate" speech and mixing it up in a word salad to make hate = violence, and therefore equivalent to a criminal act. Everyone should be telling everyone they know about this and spamming the fuck out of each of these platforms over it. When they are forced with either removing a large percentage of their user base (and revenue) or backing down, they WILL back down. If they don't they will end up like Twitter or Target with investors fleeing like rats from a sinking ship.

As mentioned before, generally people just don't really care. I mean you and I do, but ask some people you know, bet you most if not all couldn't care less. Sad really.

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June 01, 2016, 08:12:23 PM
 #27

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However, there is a clear distinction between freedom of expression and conduct that incites violence and hate.

Since when is inciting hate a crime? What if an individual or organization SHOULD be hated? There are plenty. They are simply using the pre-programmed reaction to the words "hate" speech and mixing it up in a word salad to make hate = violence, and therefore equivalent to a criminal act. Everyone should be telling everyone they know about this and spamming the fuck out of each of these platforms over it. When they are forced with either removing a large percentage of their user base (and revenue) or backing down, they WILL back down. If they don't they will end up like Twitter or Target with investors fleeing like rats from a sinking ship.

As mentioned before, generally people just don't really care. I mean you and I do, but ask some people you know, bet you most if not all couldn't care less. Sad really.


Yep. So what? This defeatist attitude will not help anyone for sure.

"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." -Edmund Burke
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June 01, 2016, 08:22:38 PM
 #28

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However, there is a clear distinction between freedom of expression and conduct that incites violence and hate.

Since when is inciting hate a crime? What if an individual or organization SHOULD be hated? There are plenty. They are simply using the pre-programmed reaction to the words "hate" speech and mixing it up in a word salad to make hate = violence, and therefore equivalent to a criminal act. Everyone should be telling everyone they know about this and spamming the fuck out of each of these platforms over it. When they are forced with either removing a large percentage of their user base (and revenue) or backing down, they WILL back down. If they don't they will end up like Twitter or Target with investors fleeing like rats from a sinking ship.

As mentioned before, generally people just don't really care. I mean you and I do, but ask some people you know, bet you most if not all couldn't care less. Sad really.


Yep. So what? This defeatist attitude will not help anyone for sure.

"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." -Edmund Burke

Okay, point taken. But realistically what are you going to do? You'll have to make them care before they will listen and take notice.

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June 01, 2016, 08:24:10 PM
 #29

i dont understand how that is possible to tackle this issue. they could block certain words for sure, other than that i dont think so they could monitor everything  Wink lets see how they are going to tackle this thing without any issue. since its a fine balance between freedom of speech

You'd be amazed how good the software is at telling what a tweet is about. Look how well email providers detect spam and drop it in your spam folder - they simply need to employ similar algos on hate speech, to get the same result.

 
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