Not enough to remove hate speech, social networks must archive evidence: Human Rights Watch
Online posts could also help document atrocities and abuses such as chemical weapons attacks in Syria and police abuse in the United States.
Paris: Social media networks should start archiving hate speech and other illegal posts after taking them down so they can be used as evidence in prosecutions, Human Rights Watch said on Thursday.
Platforms were becoming more reactive in removing undesirable content, the New York-based rights group said in a report.
But it was time that such content was preserved to facilitate any subsequent prosecution of individuals, including war criminals, HRW said.
“Social media content, particularly photographs and videos, posted by perpetrators, victims, and witnesses to abuses, as well as others has become increasingly central to some prosecutions of war crimes and other international crimes,” it said.
Online posts could also help document atrocities and abuses “such as chemical weapons attacks in Syria, a security force crackdown in Sudan, and police abuse in the United States”, it said.
While it was “understandable” that social media platforms remove content that incites or promotes violence, “they are not currently archiving this material in a manner that is accessible for investigators and researchers to help hold perpetrators to account”, it said.
Increasingly sophisticated artificial intelligence systems were often taking down content before police “have a chance to see it or even know that it exists”, it noted.
HRW said social media platforms should work with other parties concerned to develop mechanisms “to preserve potential evidence of serious crimes” and make it available to investigators, civil society organisations, journalists and academics.
The experience of the US, where online evidence of child sexual exploitation is preserved for 90 days, may yield important lessons for such a discussion, it said.
In the first quarter of this year, Facebook took down 6.3 million posts because they were considered to be “terrorist propaganda”, 25.5 million because of violence and 9.6 million because of hate speech.
Last year, millions of Twitter accounts were flagged because of hate content or threats of violence.
In 2016, Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter and YouTube created a “Hash Sharing Consortium” to pool databases of inappropriate content.
Pinterest, Dropbox, Amazon, LinkedIn, Mega.nz, Instagram, WhatsApp and others have since joined.