In an1,100 plus-word blog post, Microsoft outlined policies for removing
"terrorist content" online, which it's defining as
anything that supports organizations on the U.N security council sanction list.
The company changed its terms of use "to specifically prohibit the posting
of terrorist content on [their] hosted consumer services," such as
OneNote, a cloud-based document program.
"When terrorist content on our hosted consumer services is brought to
our attention via our online reporting tool, we will remove it," Microsoft
wrote in its post Friday.
The company also said it will help fund technology to identify and curb the
distribution of terrorist material, and work to educate young people about
misinformation and hate speech.
"The events of the past few months are a strong reminder that the
Internet can be used for the worst
reasons imaginable," Microsoft said.
Microsoft is entering this conversation months later than firms like Twitter
and Facebook. But the company says it plays a different role.
"Although Microsoft does not run any of the leading social networks or
video-sharing sites, from time to time, terrorist content may be posted to or
shared on our Microsoft-hosted consumer services. In light of this, we want to
be transparent about our approach to combating terrorist content," it said.
Late last year, Twitter changed its policy on violent posts to include more
explicit rules about when it can shut down accounts. While Twitter didn't
specifically cite the terrorist attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, the statement
came amid growing outrage that terrorists use social media to recruit new
members.
Twitter announced in February that it has shut down more than 125,000
accounts since the middle of last year.
read also: twitter's fight against terroism
Facebook has also been aggressively going after terrorist accounts -- so
much so that CEO Mark Zuckerberg was threatened by a group of ISIS supporters
earlier this year.
In a 25-minute video, a group that calls itself the Sons Caliphate Army
showed pictures of Zuckerberg and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey engulfed in flames.
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