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Death Threats and Online Content Moderation
Season 11 · Episode 5

Death Threats and Online Content Moderation

This week we’ll be examining online death threats and asking how online platforms ought to respond.

UCL Uncovering Politics · Jeffrey Howard, Sarah Fisher, Emily McTernan

February 22, 202431m 27s

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Show Notes

Death threats, on the face it, appear to be exactly the sort of content that an online platform ought to censor – or ‘moderate’, as the preferred and obscuring term has it. Surely it is impermissible to threaten someone’s life and surely it is appropriate for online spaces like Facebook – or now Meta – to remove such speech. 

But what if the statement isn’t really an urge towards violence, nor a declaration of one’s intent to kill? Sometimes, when people make death threats, say to dictators, might that really be more of a political slogan or a form of critique? What if there is no intent behind the threat, and the target isn’t in danger? And ought online platforms care about such nuance when thinking about what to leave up and what to take down. 

We are joined by Jeffrey Howard, who is Associate Professor in Political Philosophy and Public Policy, and director of the Digital Speech Lab, and Sarah Fisher, a Research Fellow.

 

Mentioned in this episode:

Topics

political sciencesocial mediaonline speechregulationonline safetydeath threats