In a move that was foreshadowed last week in a public message from YouTube,Peter Baumgartner several internet giants, including Facebook, Twitter, Microsoft, and YouTube, have announced the formation of the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism.
SEE ALSO: Theresa May renews her call for internet regulation following the London Bridge attack"The spread of terrorism and violent extremism is a pressing global problem and a critical challenge for us all," reads part of a statement posted on Twitter policy blog. "We believe that by working together, sharing the best technological and operational elements of our individual efforts, we can have a greater impact on the threat of terrorist content online."
Identical messages were posted on the official blogs of Facebook, Microsoft, and YouTube.
"By working together, sharing the best technological and operational elements of our individual efforts, we can have a greater impact."
Based on the framing of the effort, the group appears to be designed to create formal guidelines of cooperation between the online services with regard to resisting the increasingly sophisticated ways terrorists harness social media and the internet to spread their messages and recruit new followers.
Among the specific areas of collaborative focus, the companies will work together on research (policy decisions and ways to counter terrorist speech) and technological solutions, such as the Shared Industry Hash Database, which serves as a "digital fingerprinting" system for tracking terrorist videos and images.
The group has also pledged to work closer with governmental anti-terror agencies and highlighted a partnership with the UN Security Council Counter-Terrorism Executive Directorate (UN CTED) as well as the ICT4Peace Initiative that will result in a series of workshops in Silicon Valley.
This new focus on self-policing comes at a particularly important moment, just weeks after a string of terrorists incidents in the UK led Prime Minister Theresa May to call for stronger internet regulation.
By sending the signal to governments that they're being aggressive about working together on anti-terror campaigns online, it's likely that this new tech consortium is hoping to avoid being regulated in way that may have detrimental effects to the companies' operations... and profits.
The scope of our work will evolve over time as we will need to be responsive to the ever-evolving terrorist and extremist tactics," the statement continues. "Further information on all of the above initiatives will be shared in due course."
Topics Cybersecurity Facebook Microsoft X/Twitter YouTube
Google Chrome may soon keep your back button from being hijackedWoman tries to walk in ridiculous high heels, breaks every part of her bodyAT&T launches 5G network in the U.S., but don't get too excited yetJuul employees get $1.3 million bonuses thanks to Big TobaccoA new iPad mini is reportedly on its way18 of the best pop singles of 2018This woman's complaint about a worm in her lettuce escalated hilariouslyGoogle Chrome now has a handy drawing app for your silly sketchesDisney removes healthy gumbo recipe after Louisiana revoltsElon Musk's 'proof of concept' tunnel didn't prove muchCompassionate kid donates piggy bank money to mom's charity fundraiser7 smart home gifts that even renters will loveClinton's doctor says she's 'healthy and fit to serve'The 'bun drop' is the latest confusing Instagram hair trendEverything you need to know about Facebook's terrible 24 hoursTheresa May told to ditch high heels to end sexism in the workplaceThe dark dungeon of 'Below' is mysterious and enticingNorwegian black metal musician unexpectedly elected to town councilDon't fret if your new iPad Pro arrives slightly bent, Apple saysDude makes new friend after dialing wrong number on FaceTime World Series: All the reasons superstitious Cleveland fans should worry A company backed by Alibaba just bought a big online grocer Uber's new app will predict where you're going The next frontier for startups is urban tech Surpise huntsman spider causes man to freak out, crashing car into a lake The Apple Watch just got a selfie camera Xiaomi launches bigger air purifier, portable air quality monitor in China Britain simply can't agree on how to pronounce this 5 Watch this shark swim right below surfers like its NBD Google's Daydream View VR headset will go on sale very soon 'Humans of New York' creator urges followers to dump Trump Watch Kevin Hart, Candace Cameron Bure and other celebs react to funny 'Star Wars' videos Guy found after 2 weeks in the wild was on a journey of self Shrugs, clowns and bacon emoji are coming to your iPhone No, Starbucks did not release a green holiday cup Instagram goes down for a minute and people can't handle it Miss Piggy now has a fabulous fashion line Woman sexually assaulted by Brock Turner shares emotional essay about being a survivor A Chicago Cubs fan's World Series diary: One. More. Game. How to hack your hotel's finicky wi
2.1826s , 10131.59375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Peter Baumgartner】,Creation Information Network