Threats
Terrorist
material reappears online 'as quickly as it is banished', warns thinktank
Fanatics
are being driven to the “dark web” as they combat attempts to remove online
terrorist material, warns Quilliam Foundation
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Concerns that efforts
to remove extremist material online are fruitless Photo: ALAMY
10:00PM GMT 24 Dec
2014
Attempts to block
extremist material online will always fail despite a British counter-terrorism
unit taking down more than 100 web pages a day, a think tank has warned.
The terrorist material
reappears on the Internet as quickly as it is banished and the policy risks
driving fanatics on to the “dark web” where they are even harder to track,
according to the Quilliam Foundation.
It warned that
censorship and filtering tactics are ineffective and that openly challenging
the material is likely to have a greater impact.
The report said
despite concerns over fanatics radicalising themselves online, most vulnerable
people are still targeted offline first and the Internet is only a “secondary
socialiser”.
Greater efforts are
needed to combat radicalisation in schools, universities and prisons, it
concluded.
Figures show the
Government’s Counter-Terrorism Internet Referral Unit has removed 65,000 items
rom the Internet that "encouraged or glorified acts of terrorism",
including 46,000 since December last year.
Some 70 per cent of
that content related to Isil, Syria and Iraq.
Separate figures
suggest terrorists involved in at least seven of the ten major plots foiled in
the UK since 2010 had access to Inspire – the banned online terror magazine
published by al-Qaeda.
But the Quilliam
report, which examined the effectiveness of the Government’s
counter-radicalisation Prevent programme, found efforts to tackle online
fanatics are unlikely to succeed.
“Negative measures,
including Government-backed censorship and filtering initiatives, are
ineffective in tackling online extremism, tackling the symptoms rather than the
causes of radicalisation,” it said.
“Motivated extremists
and terrorist affiliates can evade such measures easily through the dark net
and virtual private networks.
“Blocked materials
consistently reappear online and there is no effective way for ISPs (Internet
service providers) or social media companies to filter extremist content.”
It comes amid a
growing row over the responsibilities of Internet companies to help curb
extremism online and those who exploit their platforms to radicalise and spread
hatred.
In November, Robert
Hannigan, the new director of GCHQ, warned that some Internet services had
become "the command and control networks of choice" for terrorists
and criminals but that the companies were "in denial".
Later that month,
Facebook can under attack after a report in to the murder of soldier Lee Rigby
by Islamist fanatics.
It emerged the company
failed to pass on information that could have prevented the murder after one of
the killers, Michael Adebowale, used the social networking site to express his
"intent to murder a soldier in the most graphic and emotive manner"
five months before the 2013 Woolwich attack.
The report found that
Facebook had not been aware of that specific exchange.
However, Parliament's
intelligence and security committee discovered that Facebook had previously
shut down Adebowale's accounts on the site because he had discussed terrorism,
but failed to relay concerns to the security services.
But the report concluded:
“Counterspeech and positive measures are critical in challenging the sources of
extremism and terrorism-related material online.”
It added: “Expanding
negative measures to include unwanted extremist content that does not breach
defined legal terms would push users that feel targeted into the dark web where
monitoring Is no longer possible.
“This increases
security risks if counter-terrorism and counter-extremism practitioners are
impeded from monitoring and surveillance.”
Jonathan Russell,
political liaison officer for Quilliam, said: “Recognising that censorship
alone is ineffective and counterproductive in efforts to counter online extremism,
the government should consider building an online dimension into Prevent.
“This would enable
positive counterspeech to come from civil society to challenge the ideologies
and narratives that underpin extremism of all kinds".
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