GAADHE Issues A Powerful Call To Action To Tech Giants To Preserve Elections And Democracy

“At a time when hate against migrants/refugees, LGBTQI+, Roma and others is on the rise and extreme right parties campaign on such hate, social media should be as vigilant as ever, just as in the case of Greece prosecutors are and launch criminal investigations for extreme hate posts.” – Panayote Dimitras, Greek Helsinki Monitor

Global Alliance Against Digital Hate & Extremism Issues A Powerful Call To Action To Tech Giants To Preserve Elections And Democracy, Former Heads Of State Express Concern About Digital Influence On Democracy

NEW YORK — The Global Alliance Against Digital Hate & Extremism (GAADHE) has today released an open letter to the heads of the world’s leading technology companies demanding immediate action to fairly enforce content moderation and disinformation rules without exemptions for political and public figures. This Alliance is supported by a network of more than 70 organizations worldwide that can speak to the consequences to community safety and democracy when political and public figures are allowed to bypass the rules.

The letter, addressed to some of the most powerful tech CEOs in the world, urges them to take definitive steps to curb the amplification of harmful and violative content from political and public figures on their platforms in this year of global elections, even as they reduce election integrity staff. 

Most importantly, this includes enforcing existing policies that are currently not equally applied to political leaders and influential figures who are often exempted from rules based on ‘newsworthiness’ or ‘public interest.’ This is especially evident in online political advertising where there is no fact-checking of the material at all, leading to a significant source of disinformation in all languages, but especially non-English languages. 

“Social media companies have a profound impact on democracy and human rights globally,” the letter states. “Our collective experience has shown that lax enforcement of content moderation policies leads to the spread of disinformation, hate speech, and incitement to violence, which in turn fuels offline atrocities and undermines democratic institutions.”

“The eyes of the world are on technology companies at this crucial moment for global democracy, as they decide whether to lead with integrity or continue to allow harmful narratives from political figures to shape our societies and threaten communities,” said Wendy Via, co-founder of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism. “We must demand more than ad hoc responses; we need consistent, fair application of human content moderation that holds all individuals, regardless of their status, to the same standards. The time to act is now—our democracies depend on it.”

Also released today is a letter to tech leaders from the esteemed Club de Madrid, a coalition of more than 100 democratic former heads of state. The letter highlights the alarming trend of countries moving away from democracy and toward authoritarianism, exacerbated by the influence of social media platforms and the manipulation of digital technologies. Recognizing the urgent need for action, Club de Madrid calls on technology companies to take proactive measures to safeguard democracies and electoral integrity, curtailing speech by public figures that incites violence, fuels discrimination and jeopardizes social inclusion, which Club de Madrid calls Shared Societies.

“We bear witness to the erosion of democratic values in the digital era, and are urging urgent action. Hate speech online silences voices, desensitizes societies, and undermines the very fabric of democracy, emboldening authoritarians”, remarked Danilo Türk, President of Club de Madrid and former President of Slovenia.

The GAADHE letter highlights several key concerns:

  • Given the active threats to democracy, especially in this year of elections (at least 60 countries representing half the world’s population are expected to hold elections in 2024), social media and other online platforms should eliminate exemptions that allow political and public figures to spread harmful content without active human content moderation;
  • A body of research suggests the incendiary rhetoric of political leaders can make political violence more likely, incites violence and gives it direction, complicates the law enforcement response, and increases fear in vulnerable communities; 
  • Chaos from content posted on social media platforms, including mis- and disinformation, has weakened struggling and strong democracies and has also intensified destabilization in authoritarian states;
  • There is a critical and urgent need for tech companies to employ human moderators who are trained and sensitive to cultural and linguistic nuances to oversee content; and
  • Members call for greater transparency and consistency in applying moderation policies to protect elections and uphold civil liberties and human rights.

The coalition offers to partner with tech companies to share expertise in implementing effective and equitable content moderation practices to help ensure a safe, fair, and just online environment that protects democracies, aligned with the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.

GAADHE Member comments:

“With what we have witnessed on digital platforms in recent elections in Africa and cognizant of the fact that more than 15 countries are on their way to this critical calendar point, where hate speech and tribalism are digitally exploited as electoral weapons with dramatic and dire consequences on communities, Internet platforms and technology companies should imperatively allocate more resources to content oversight and moderation, with a special programme for electorally motivated ads.” Charlie Martial Ngounou, AfroLeadership

“At a time when hate against migrants/refugees, LGBTQI+, Roma and others is on the rise and extreme right parties campaign on such hate, social media should be as vigilant as ever, just as in the case of Greece prosecutors are and launch criminal investigations for extreme hate posts.” – Panayote Dimitras, Greek Helsinki Monitor

“India is the world’s largest democracy and as Indians we pride ourselves with the values of secularism and freedom enshrined in our constitution. Meta’s consistent failure in India has harmed our social cohesion and our democracy. We demand Meta stop taking ad money from shadow advertisers who run ads filled with ‘othering,’ dehumanizing and misleading claims about Muslims, minorities and critical voices. We can not allow social media companies to undo decades of struggle by civil society to create accountability and transparency in elections.” Ritumbra Manuvie, The London Story

“Aggressive xenophobia, racism, antisemitism, homophobia and other types of hate speech have been spread through social media platforms during electoral campaigns in Poland in the last years on a huge scale. It got many hatemongers elected to high posts and poisoned our political discourse. It is high time for the platforms to stop enabling the peddlers of hate.” Dr. Rafal Pankowski, ‘NEVER AGAIN’ Association

“This year, half the world’s population is set to cast a vote in a world where the digital landscape is actually worse than it was when powerful politicians used social media to incite insurrections in the United States and Brazil. We know from extensive evidence that those social media users most likely to cause offline harm are prominent figures, which is why it is essential that these companies apply all their rules to them as they would do with every other user, underpinned by a commitment to human moderation review. ” Kyle Taylor, Fair Vote UK 

Harmful Political Speech and Disinformation Resources:

Slander, Lies, and Incitement: India’s million dollar election meme network – Ads depicting the BJP opposition as a “virus,” “demon,” and violent rhetoric to “break their spine.”

Rapport Africa Sans Haine sur les discours de haine liés aux élections du 20 décembre 2023 en RDC (Africa Without Hate Report on hate speech related to the December 20, 2023 elections in the DRC) – “Social cohesion and national unity have been seriously damaged by the speeches of candidates and their supporters, especially on social networks. More seriously, no less than 19 deaths were recorded in the electoral context.”

Democracies Under Threat: How Loopholes for Trump’s Social Media Enabled the Global Rise of Far-Right Extremism -“Violence linked to far-right political figures’ use of social media is not a matter of opinion. Experts in genocidal processes routinely highlight the power of political figures to incite violence against their perceived enemies.”

“We need to kill them”: Xenophobic hate speech approved by Facebook, TikTok and YouTube”

How Orbán Flooded Central Europe With Millions Of Online Ads During Election Season – “If you know the rules of the ads platform, this is how you can get around it.”

Latinos and a Growing Crisis of Trust – “Right-wing Latino and Hispanic accounts and influencers continued to push disinformation and misinformation in Spanish and English about false claims of Democrat-led voter fraud to steal the election.”

Source

Global Alliance Demands Meta Ban Hindu Extremist Organization Bajrang Da [GHM is member of GAADH Steering Committee]

On Tuesday, the Steering Committee for the Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism, were joined by the South Asia Solidarity Group, Council of Indian Muslims and other organizations in sending a letter to Meta and the Facebook Oversight Board demanding that the tech giant classify the Indian group Bajrang Dal as a dangerous organization and ban it from all Meta platforms for inciting violence and mass atrocity against vulnerable Indian caste and religious minorities.

Bajrang Dal, a militant Hindu nationalist organization and offshoot of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, is well known for its violent action against Indian minorities, particularly Muslim and Christian minorities. According to the letter, the Bajrang Dal continues to lead campaigns of terror, including calls to violence and genocide, against caste and religious minorities through their presence on social media. 

“It is imperative the Meta and the Facebook Oversight Board address their inaction in allowing dangerous groups and individuals like the Bajrang Dal and its leaders to spew genocidal hate speech against millions of Muslim and other castes and religions. Their failure of duty of care is not just morally reprehensible but criminally negligent, and they will have to account for their inaction to save lives during a genocide. Before more terror is unleashed on Indian minorities we ask Meta and the Oversight Board to take a stand for life to implement their own policies and remove these genocidal actors. Any thing less is complicity with genocide,” said Alliance member Thenmozhi Soundararajan, Executive Director of Equality Labs.

The Bajrang Dal has previously been flagged by Facebook’s own security teams as being a dangerous group and clearly fits the criteria of Meta’s own Dangerous Organization and Individuals (DOI) Policy.

In its letter, the Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism demanded Meta to: 

  • Immediately Ban Bajrang Dal: Declare Bajrang Dal to be a DOI and ban its operation from all platforms
  • Immediately Remove Hate Speech: Take down Bajrang Dal’s pages, groups and profiles supporting Bajrang Dal from all platforms, including all content associated with Bajrang Dal and its members, associates and affiliates that continue to incite acute violence and systematic harms against Muslim and other caste and religious minorities in India.
  • Convene a co-designed dialogue and make actionable commitments to human rights with Internet freedom advocates, civil society, and human rights activists in India and its diaspora on the genocide in India and how it impacts Meta’s operations.  
  • Immediately release the Indian Human RIghts Audit, which so far the company has refused to share. 

“We’re deeply distressed by the inconsistent positions related to India and we are deeply concerned that Meta is looking the other way while dangerous groups are inflicting violence and terrorizing Indian communities,” said Alliance member Dr. Ritumbra Manuvie who besides being founder director of Stichting The London Story is also a native from Faridabad a region impacted by violence. 

The Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism is an international movement, supported by more than 70 civil society organizations from across the world, mobilizing collective action for a safe, fair, and just online experience for everyone.

“Meta has a responsibility to keep its users and the communities and democracies its platforms impact safe. Civil society shouldn’t have to do its work for them especially when the dangers are so distressingly obvious. Members of the Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism have once again clearly outlined the specifics of how this group meets Meta’s dangerous organization threshold, and Meta should act today, as they should have years ago,” said Wendy Via, Alliance member and co-founder of Global Project Against Hate and Extremism. 

Many of Alliance’s members are Meta’s trusted partners and have worked globally to build accountability from the platforms on the issues of far-right hate and extremism. 

Steering committee members of the Alliance: 

AfroLeadership

AVAAZ

Conscious Advertising Network

Digital Action

‘Equality Labs’ Equality Labs

Fair Vote UK

FOA (Fighting Online Semitism)

Global Project Against Hate and Extremism

Greek Helsinki Monitor

“NEVER AGAIN” Association

Red Dot Foundation

The London Story

Other groups who signed the letter: 

South Asia Solidarity Group

International Council of Indian Muslims

SADAC (South Asian Diaspora Action Collective-Montreal)

18 Million Rising

Free Press

Czech Helsinki Committee

India Civil Watch International

Source

GAADHE (including GHM) Letter To Twitter

Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism

Linda Yaccarino, CEO
Twitter
1355 Market Street, Suite 900
 San Francisco, CA 94103 

July 26, 2023

Dear Ms.Yaccarino,

The Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism is an international movement, supported by more than 70 civil society organizations from across the world, mobilizing collective action for a safe, fair, and just online experience for everyone.

Congratulations on your new position with Twitter.  In your capacity as CEO, we are writing to ask that you reinstate and update Twitter’s Trust and Safety Council that, under Elon Musk’s leadership, was dissolved in 2022. 

The council of nearly 100 civil, human rights, and other organizations served a vital purpose to keep Twitter safe for its users, especially when it comes to hate speech, disinformation, child exploitation, suicide, and self-harm. The abrupt disbanding of this advisory committee has played a large part in Twitter’s content moderation efforts becoming nearly nonexistent as well as Twitter becoming an unsafe platform for its users, as advocates have shown and former members of the council have argued. 

As human rights and civil society groups representing regions from around the world, we have witnessed firsthand real-world harms that are amplified by the business practices of major internet and social media companies, including Twitter. From hate speech, which is illegal in some regions of the world, to the dehumanization of entire communities, to the slaughter of Muslims in India, to allowing Putin’s dehumanizing war propaganda up to and including calls for genocide, to the spread of dangerous disinformation and conspiracy theories, such as the racist and antisemitic “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory that has inspired terrorist attacks against Jews, Muslims, immigrants and refugees, the devastation is all too real. And still, Twitter continues to seethe with disinformation and hate, including Holocaust denial, antisemitism, lies about the LGBTQ+ population, anti-Muslim hatred, and misogynistic material. Twitter was recently called the worst social media platform when it comes to safety for LGBTQ+ people. The list of online harms that have resulted in offline harms is far too long to enumerate here and has impacted millions of people.

Given the dozens of elections to be held in 2024, the time is now for Twitter to reinstate the Trust and Safety Council and to improve content moderation efforts as part of the efforts to stop disinformation campaigns from undermining elections and causing political violence, especially in languages other than English.

We ask that you take steps to protect your users, impacted communities, and democracy and  invest in ending the spread of disinformation, hate speech, incitement to violence, and extremist propaganda on the platform that too often leads to offline violence and threatens human rights and inclusive democracies. We cannot strengthen democracies and protect human rights while Twitter amplifies, rewards, and profits from hate, extremism, and disinformation. 

There are many other areas in which Twitter must invest to ensure the safety of its users and health of democracies. Our movement, from all regions of the world, is united in urging you to commit the necessary resources to ensure human rights are protected on Twitter, that free expression, not hate speech and incitement to violence, are protected, and that Twitter is positioned as a platform where ideas are discussed and challenged without abuse.  

In addition to the reinstating the Trust and Safety Council, we are calling on Twitter to:

  • Reinstate the human rights team.
  • End exemptions from content moderation for the politically powerful and influencers globally. 
  • Clarify, improve, and enforce your “Violent Organizations” and “Hateful Conduct” policies.
  • Expand and ensure proportionate resources for content moderation in all languages and cultural competency for all regions where Twitter operates.
  • Fix and design algorithms to end the amplification of disinformation, hate and extremism in all languages and regions where Twitter operates. 
  • Ensure use of AI does not contribute to the spread of disinformation and is not able to be abused by bad actors. 

Twitter must prioritize these issues immediately, while maintaining full transparency with civil society regarding the platform’s policies, systems, practices, resources invested, and internal research relevant to disinformation, hate, and extremism globally. We are facing an intensification of global threats to democracies and ongoing violence driven from online platforms. With roughly 230 million daily active users, this situation will become even more perilous if Twitter fails to act. 

Under your leadership, Twitter can improve. 

The Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism is offering to share our considerable experience and expertise to ensure that Twitter becomes a safe, fair, and just online space for everyone. We look forward to meeting with you at your earliest convenience. You can contact the Alliance and set up a meeting through Wendy Via, co-founder and president of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, and Alliance Steering Committee member, at wendy@globalextremism.org.

Sincerely,

Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism

Steering Committee Members

AfroLeadership

AVAAZ

Conscious Advertising Network

Digital Action

Equality Labs

Fair Vote UK

Fighting Online Antisemitism

Global Project Against Hate and Extremism

Greek Helsinki Monitor

“NEVER AGAIN” Association

Red Dot Foundation

Source

Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism (including GHM) Demands Elon Musk Makes Twitter Safer for All Users

Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism Demands Elon Musk Makes Twitter Safer for All Users

Author Global Alliance

Published on:


Elon Musk, CEO
Twitter
1355 Market Street, Suite 900
San Francisco, CA 94103 

Dear Mr. Musk,

The Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism is an international movement, supported by more than 70 civil society organizations from across the world, mobilizing collective action for a safe, fair, and just online experience for everyone.

In the weeks since you took ownership of Twitter, you’ve met with U.S.-based civil and human rights organizations about the critical need to maintain election integrity and content moderation teams to combat hate and disinformation on the platform. You’ve also been asked how Twitter will approach former high profile users who have been banned from the platform for repeatedly violating the rules and/or inciting violence. 

As human rights and civil society groups representing regions from around the world, we also care deeply about these issues and are writing today to demand that you meet with civil society leaders and experts in our Alliance to discuss how you can approach your efforts to protect the integrity of Twitter and the safety of its users from a global perspective. It is especially critical to address this where no or insufficient regulation exists. Social media platforms, including Twitter, have not invested nearly enough resources to protect users, marginalized communities, or the sanctity of democracies, especially outside the United States and the European Union, which has led to the spread of online disinformation and hate, and spurred violent extremism across the globe.  

We have witnessed firsthand real-world harms that are amplified by the business practices of major internet and social media companies, including Twitter. From hate speech, which is illegal in some regions of the world, to the dehumanization of entire communities, to the slaughter of Muslims in India, to genocidal attacks in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, to the spread of dangerous disinformation and conspiracy theories, such as the racist and antisemitic “Great Replacement” conspiracy theory that has led to violent terrorism against Jews, Muslims, immigrants and refugees, the devastation is all too real. And still, Twitter continues to seethe with disinformation and hate, including Holocaust denial, antisemitism, lies about the LGBTQ+ population, anti-Muslim hatred, and misogynistic material. The list of online harms that have resulted in offline harms is far too long to enumerate here and has impacted millions of people.

We ask that under your leadership, Twitter invests in what it takes to put an end to the spread of disinformation, hate speech, incitement to violence, and extremist propaganda on the platform that too often leads to offline violence and threatens human rights and inclusive democracies. We cannot strengthen democracies and protect human rights while Twitter amplifies, rewards, and profits from hate, extremism, and disinformation. 

It is deeply concerning to see that under your leadership there has already been disinvestment in teams working to better moderate content and ensure algorithms work to amplify facts instead of lies and hate, for example the firing of 90 percent of the Twitter India staff, and more recently, cutting thousands of content moderators. Furthermore, your decision to fire Twitter’s human rights teams is dangerous and undermines any commitment you say you have to protecting users around the world. The reports of an increase in hate speech in the last few weeks causes serious concern. Our movement, from all regions of the world, is united in urging you to commit the necessary resources to ensure human rights are protected on Twitter, that free expression, not hate speech and incitements to violence, are protected, and that Twitter is positioned as a platform where ideas are discussed and challenged without abuse.  

Specifically, we are calling on Twitter to:

  • End exemptions from content moderation for the politically powerful and influencers globally. 
  • Clarify and improve your “Violent Organizations” and “Hateful Conduct” policies. Additionally, we call on you to ensure enforcement, with the input of civil society and experts, not only in the U.S. and Europe, but also in the Global South. 
  • Expand and ensure proportionate resources for content moderation in all languages and cultural competency for all regions where Twitter operates.
  • Fix and design algorithms to end the amplification of disinformation, hate and extremism in all languages and regions where Twitter operates. 

Twitter must prioritize these issues immediately, while maintaining full transparency with civil society regarding your policies, systems, practices, resources invested, and internal research relevant to disinformation, hate, and extremism globally. We are facing an intensification of global threats to democracies and ongoing violence driven from online platforms. With roughly 450 million monthly active users, this situation will become even more perilous if Twitter fails to act. 

The Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism is asking for the opportunity to bring our considerable experience and expertise to the table to ensure that Twitter becomes a safe, fair, and just online space for everyone. We look forward to meeting with you at your earliest convenience. You can contact the Alliance and set up a meeting through Wendy Via, co-founder and president of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, and Alliance Steering Committee member, at GAADHE.info@gmail.com.

Sincerely,

Global Alliance Against Digital Hate and Extremism

Steering Committee Members

AVAAZ

Digital Action

Equality Labs

Global Project Against Hate and Extremism

“NEVER AGAIN” Association 

—-

#NetzCourage

Africa Sans Haine

AfroLeadership

CARNEGIE UK

Center for Countering Digital Hate

Citizen D / Drzavljan D

Dangerous Speech Project

Digital Africa Research Lab

Digital Rights Foundation

Educators’ Institute for Human Rights

Fair Vote UK

Far Right Observatory 

Forces of Renewal Southeast Asia (FORSEA)

Forum for Secular Bangladesh & Trial of War Criminals of 1971

Foundation for a Path Forward

Free Press

Free Rohingya Coalition

Fundamedios

Global Witness

Greek Helsinki Monitor

Háttér Társaság / Háttér Society

IMPRESS

Ipas

Justice for Prosperity

LOVE-Storm Together against Online Hate

Media Diversity Institute

Media Monitoring Africa

Migrant, Immigrant & Refugee Rights Alliance

Next Billion Network

Paradigm Initiative

Red Dot Foundation Global

Red Dot Foundation India 

Sarajevo Open Centre

The Conscious Advertising Network (CAN)

The London Story

The Media Diversity Institute

The Sparrow Project

UCD Centre for Digital Policy

World Jewish Congress