Tinder and similar apps fail to properly address issues of online harm. A lack of policy is to blame, as well as app design features and society’s general attitudes towards more minor cases of abuse.
Imagery and talk of guns can often be thinly veiled forms of threats.
Zach Gibson/Getty Images
Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social networks say they are targeting hate, but they’re overlooking a major source of hateful content: gun talk.
Can online posts help scholars – or police – tell the difference between people who are just ranting and those who plan real violence?
Aggapom Poomitud/Shutterstock.com
Researchers look for signals that might distinguish people who are upset and ranting online from those who intend to do real physical harm.
Jacinda Ardern and Immanuel Macron will head up the Christchurch Call meeting, aimed at coordinating international regulation of harmful online content.
Ian Langsdon / AAP
Being seen to lead is clearly an important political aspect of managing online content. But internet regulation must focus on creating policy that is clear, accountable, balanced and open to appeals.
Only the law can hold internet companies criminally accountable.
from www.shutterstock.com