Tech companies in the crosshairs on white
supremacy and free speech
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[August 15, 2017]
By Jim Finkle and Salvador Rodriguez
TORONTO/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The
neo-Nazi website Daily Stormer had its internet domain registration
revoked twice in less than 24 hours in the wake of the weekend violence
in Charlottesville, Virginia, part of a broad move by the tech industry
in recent months to take a stronger hand in policing online hate-speech
and incitements to violence.
GoDaddy Inc, which manages internet names and registrations, disclosed
late on Sunday via Twitter that it had given Daily Stormer 24 hours to
move its domain to another provider, saying it had violated GoDaddy's
terms of service.
The white supremacist website helped organize the weekend rally in
Charlottesville where a 32-year-old woman was killed and 19 people were
injured when a man plowed a car into a crowd protesting the white
nationalist rally.
After GoDaddy revoked Daily Stormer's registration, the website turned
to Alphabet Inc's Google Domains. The Daily Stormer domain was
registered with Google shortly before 8 a.m. Monday PDT (1500 GMT) and
the company announced plans to revoke it at 10:56 a.m., according to a
person familiar with the revocation.
As of late Monday the site was still running on a Google-registered
domain. Google issued a statement but did not say when the site would be
taken down.
Internet companies have increasingly found themselves in the crosshairs
over hate speech and other volatile social issues, with politicians and
others calling on them to do more to police their networks while civil
libertarians worry about the firms suppressing free speech.
Twitter Inc, Facebook Inc, Google's YouTube and other platforms have
ramped up efforts to combat the social media efforts of Islamic militant
groups, largely in response to pressure from European governments. Now
they are facing similar pressures in the United States over white
supremacist and neo-Nazi content.
Facebook confirmed on Monday that it took down the event page that was
used to promote and organize the “Unite the Right” rally in
Charlottesville.
Facebook allows people to organize peaceful protests or rallies, but the
social network said it would remove such pages when a threat of
real-world harm and affiliation with hate organizations becomes clear.
“Facebook does not allow hate speech or praise of terrorist acts or hate
crimes, and we are actively removing any posts that glorify the
horrendous act committed in Charlottesville,” the company said in a
statement.
Several other companies also took action. Canadian internet company
Tucows Inc stopped hiding the domain registration information of Andrew
Anglin, the founder of Daily Stormer. Tucows, which was previously
providing the website with services masking Anglin’s phone number and
email address, said Daily Stormer had breached its terms of service.
“They are inciting violence,” said Michael Goldstein, vice president for
sales and marketing at Tucows, a Toronto-based company. “It’s a
dangerous site and people should know who it is coming from.”
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A security guard keeps watch as he walks past a logo of Google in
Shanghai, China, April 21, 2016. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo -
RTS1ACCZ
Anglin did not respond to a request for comment.
Discord, a 70-person San Francisco company that allows video gamers
to communicate across the internet, did not mince words in its
decision to shut down the server of Altright.com, an alt-right news
website, and the accounts of other white nationalists.
“We will continue to take action against white supremacy, Nazi
ideology, and all forms of hate,” the company said in a tweet
Monday. Altright.com did not respond to a request for comment.
Meanwhile, Twilio Inc Chief Executive Jeff Lawson tweeted Sunday
that the company would update its use policy to prohibit hate
speech. Twilio’s services allow companies and organizations, such as
political groups or campaigns, to send text messages to their
communities.
Internet companies, which enjoy broad protections under U.S. law for
the activities of people using their services, have mostly tried to
avoid being arbiters of what is acceptable speech.
But the ground is now shifting, said one executive at a major
Silicon Valley firm. Twitter, for one, has moved sharply against
harassment and hate speech after enduring years of criticism for not
doing enough.
Facebook is beefing up its content monitoring teams. Google is
pushing hard on new technology to help it monitor and delete YouTube
videos that celebrate violence.
All this comes as an influential bloc of senators, including
Republican Senator Rob Portman and Democratic Senator Richard
Blumenthal, is pushing legislation that would make it easier to
penalize operators of websites that facilitate online sex
trafficking of women and children.
That measure, despite the non-controversial nature of its espoused
goal, was met with swift and coordinated opposition from tech firms
and internet freedom groups, who fear that being legally liable for
the postings of users would be a devastating blow to the internet
industry.
(Reporting by Jim Finkle in Toronto and Salvador Rodriguez in San
Francisco; Additional reporting by David Ingram and Dustin Volz in
San Francisco, and Chris Michaud in New York and Alastair Sharp in
Toronto; Editing by Nick Zieminski and Lisa Shumaker)
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