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Internet intermediaries and counter-terrorism: Between self-regulation and outsourcing law enforcement1

机译:互联网中介机构和反恐:自我监管和外包执法之间 1

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Recent years have seen increasing pressure on Internet intermediaries that provide a platform for and curate third-party content to monitor and police, on behalf of the State, online content generated or disseminated by users. This trend is prominently motivated by the use of ICTs by terrorist groups as a tool for recruitment, financing, and planning operations. States and international organizations have long called for enhanced cooperation between the public and private sectors to aid efforts to counter terrorism and violent extremism. However, as the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression noted in his latest report to the Human Rights Council, 'the intersection of State behaviour and corporate roles in the digital age remains somewhat new for many States'. Detailed information on the means and modalities of content control exercised by online platforms is scarce. Terms of service and community standards are commonly drafted in terms that do not provide sufficiently clear guidance on the circumstances under which content may be blocked, removed or restricted, or access to a service may be restricted or terminated. Users have limited possibilities to challenge decisions to restrict material or access to a service. Moreover, as private bodies, such platforms are generally subject to limited democratic or independent oversight. At the same time, having private actors such as social media companies increasingly undertake traditionally public interest tasks in the context of Internet governance is likely unavoidable, as public authorities frequently lack the human or technical resources to satisfactorily perform these tasks. Against this background, this paper aims to examine ways to define the contours of the division of responsibilities in countering terrorism and violent extremism between the public and private spheres. It addresses ways to ensure that Internet intermediaries carry out quasi-enforcement and quasi-adjudicative tasks in a manner compliant with international human rights norms and standards.
机译:近年来,人们对互联网中介机构提供一个平台和牧师第三方内容监控和警察,代表国家的压力越来越大,网上的内容产生或由用户传播。这种趋势是显着通过使用信息通信技术的恐怖集团,作为招聘,融资和规划操作的工具的动机。各国和国际组织长期以来一直呼吁对援助工作的公共和私营部门之间加强合作,以打击恐怖主义和暴力极端主义。然而,由于特别报告员对表达自由在向人权理事会的最新报告指出“国家行为,在数字化时代的企业角色的交集仍然是许多国家有些新的”。通过在线平台行使的内容控制的手段和方式的详细信息很少。服务条款和社区标准,不提供下其内容可能会被封锁,删除或限制,或者对服务的访问可能会受到限制或终止的情况下,充分明确的指导条款通常起草。用户具有有限的可能性,以挑战决定限制材料或对服务的访问。此外,作为私人机构,这些平台通常都受到有限的民主和独立的监督。与此同时,其私人行为,如社交媒体公司越来越多地在互联网治理的背景下进行的传统公共利益的任务可能是不可避免的,因为政府当局往往缺乏人力和技术资源,以圆满执行这些任务。在此背景下,本文旨在研究如何界定在公共和私人领域之间的反恐和暴力极端主义职责分工的轮廓。它解决方法,以确保互联网中介进行准执法和准裁判任务与国际人权规范和标准的方式兼容。

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