Not exact matches
Just a day earlier, the French prime minister and European Commission officials met separately with Facebook, Google, Twitter Inc and other companies to demand faster action
on what the commission called «
online terrorism incitement and
hate speech.»
We define
online hate speech, or cyberhate, as the use of electronic communications technology to spread bigoted or hateful messages or information about people based
on their actual (or perceived) race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, gender, sexual orientation, disability, or other similar characteristic.
Social networks and their Terms of Service (TOS) have been at the centre of current
online debates about free
speech and
hate speech on the Web.
The call arises in a new report from West Coast LEAF
on what it calls cyber misogyny involving
online and often discriminatory sexual harassment of women,
hate speech targeting sexual minorities, and stalking and threats directed at former lovers.
What is the Code of Conduct
on countering illegal
online hate speech and how is it complemented by this Communication?
The Code of Conduct
on countering illegal
online hate speech is a series of commitments by Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Microsoft to combat the spread of
hate content in Europe.
Being genned up
on private conversations, tiffs, suicide - related posts, spamming, harassment,
hate speech, commercial solicitations, threats, and even the dark, inane side of
online networking.
The issue of abuse and
hate speech on online platforms generally has rocketed up the political agenda in recent years, especially in Europe — where Germany now has a tough new law to regulate takedowns.