US social media giant Facebook launched a campaign in Britain on Friday to counter the spread of online extremism following warnings from Prime Minister Theresa May after four terror attacks in three months.
Facebook said it would seek to educate
charities and other organisations on how to fight hate speech, in the
wake of recent terror attacks in Belgium, Britain and France.
The Online Civil Courage Initiative
(OCCI) will act as a forum for charities and other nonprofit
organisations to share their experiences of extremism and develop "best
practices" to tackle the issue, both on and offline.
There are already OCCI schemes in France and Germany.
Earlier this year, Group of Seven (G7)
leaders had urged online giants like Facebook and Google to do more to
curb extremist content online.
"The fight is moving from the battlefield to the internet," May said at the time.
Partners in the new initiative include
the Jo Cox Foundation, which was established in memory of the British
member of parliament who was assassinated last year by a man with links
to neo-Nazi organisations.
Other partner organisations include anti-hate groups from the Jewish and Muslim communities.
"There is no place for hate or violence on Facebook," the company´s chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg said Friday.
"We use technology like AI (artificial
intelligence) to find and remove terrorist propaganda, and we have teams
of counterterrorism experts and reviewers around the world working to
keep extremist content off our platform.
"Partnerships with others -- including
tech companies, civil society, researchers and governments -- are also a
crucial piece of the puzzle."
"We know we have more to do, but through
our platform, our partners and our community we will continue to learn
to keep violence and extremism off Facebook."
The announcement Friday comes a week
after Facebook launched a series of counter-terrorism measures in the
wake of the recent terror attacks in Manchester and London.
In a separate announcement Friday, the
British government rolled out new rules to crack down on terrorist and
criminal financing.
Businesses like banks, estate agents and
accounting and payment firms will have to carry out "stringent and
targeted checks" to make sure that money "is from a legitimate source
and will not be used to fund terror acts", the Treasury said in a
statement.
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