Experts urge task force on antisemitism to penalize uncooperative social media platforms - Action News
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Experts urge task force on antisemitism to penalize uncooperative social media platforms

An international task force is calling ongovernments to adopt a clear definition of antisemitismand push social media giants to bemore transparenton how they remove hateful content but stopsshort of saying those companiesshould be fined for doing a poor job ofpolicing of their platforms.

Experts who spoke to task force are calling for direct action against social media giants

A graffiti removal worker cleans anti-Semitic graffiti, including a swastika, that was spray painted on the door of The Glebe Minyan in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2016. The federal government is making it easier for religious and cultural groups at risk of hate crimes to improve security in and around their buildings.
A graffiti removal worker cleans antisemitic graffiti, including a swastika, that was spray painted on the door of The Glebe Minyan in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2016. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

An international task force is calling ongovernments to adopt a clear definition of antisemitismand push social media giants to bemore transparenton how they remove hateful content but stopsshort of saying those companiesshould be fined for doing a poor job ofpolicing their platforms.

The group's interim report acknowledged thatmany of the experts and civil society organizations itspoke to are looking for more.

The Inter-Parliamentary Task Force to Combat Online Antisemitism was convened in September2020 in a bid to cross-promote policies on combating online hate speech in different countries.

The task force includeslawmakers from Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Israel and Australia.Liberal MP Anthony Housefather, Conservative MP Marty Morantz,NDP MP Randall Garrison andformer Liberal MP Michael Levittmake up the task force's Canadian contingent.

NDP MP Randall Garrison is one of the Canadians serving on the task force. (CBC)

Imran Ahmed, founding CEO of the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, was one of the experts who spoke to the task force. The report says hecalled for "government pressure or legislation that would affect the platforms' 'bottom lines' as the key way to ensure change in the online space."

The task force also spoke to Jeff Orlowski, the filmmaker behind Netflix's hit documentary The Social Dilemma. Thereport saysOrlowski"described the financial incentive that social media companies have to keep you engaged for as long as possible" and warned "without regulation, the platforms do not have incentive to limit content."

"We realize that steps will be incremental," said Brian Herman, director of government relations for B'nai Brith Canada, a Jewish advocacy group that also spoke to the task force. His organization was looking to thetask force to call for international cooperation on combating antisemitism onlineand legislative power to compel social media platforms to crack down.

"Overall, we value a road map from the inter-parliamentary task force," Herman said.

Housefather said he is not opposed to stronger rules for uncooperative social media platformsand hinted that could show upin the task force'sfinal set of recommendations.

He saidit would be perfectly reasonable to introduce sanctions if a company is warned and does not act.

"I don't think we've reached that point yet in our international consensus," he added.

He said the task force's interim report was meant to find common groundfor countries that "have different rights or different charters of rights and different local politics."

Antisemitic memes spilling into real-world violence

In May, during the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas, B'nai Brith warned that online antisemitic memes were inspiringreal-world violence and that its"anti-hate hotline was ringing off the hook with reports of harassment, violence and online bullying."

University of Windsor law student Tiphaera Ziner-Cohen, a modern Orthodox Jew, told CBC News she experienced hate both online and in the real world.

"I received messages telling me that I killed babies, calling me a baby killer, telling me that I'm going to Hell, I'm going to be burning in Hell," she recalled.

In May, she said,she and her younger brother werevisiting downtown Toronto during a pro-Palestinian protest.Shesaid a group of protesters identified the pair as Jewish and began to chase after them.

"After they punched my brother, they grabbed me, threw me on the ground, someone straddled me and started punching me in the face," she said.

The federal government announced new legislation to tackle online hate last monthand has adopted a clear definition of antisemitism based onthe one drafted bythe International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, as recommended by the task force.

Ottawa's new legislation does not include the power to impose fines on social media platforms, although the government has said it would have separate legislation to govern the likes of Twitter and Facebook.

Canada is also convening a summit on antisemitism next week.

It's not clear when thetask force will issue its final set of recommendations, but its chair, U.S. Rep.Debbie Wasserman Schultz (Democrat, Florida), suggested they willhaveteeth.

"No matter what the leaders of these social media companies and technology platforms testify to in front of panels in each of our countries, they simply are unwilling to police themselves," she said.

"We gave them a chance and they have failed to meet the moment."

With files from Michelle Song