The report, “Countering Online Radicalization: A Strategy for Action,” says that “any strategy that relies on reducing the availability of content alone is bound to be crude, expensive and counterproductive. Radicalization is largely a real-world phenomenon that cannot be dealt with simply by ‘pulling the plug.’”Its authors say that removing or filtering Web sites doesn’t curb online terrorist activities because the practice is too expensive and only addresses one outlet — the Internet — of extremism, while terrorist networks are created and nurtured offline. There’s also no real way to curb the “conversational” portion of the Internet where extremist ideas are discussed, like chat rooms and instant messaging.The Web’s Role in Terrorism May Be Overstated - Digits - WSJ
Thursday, March 12, 2009
The Web’s Role in Terrorism May Be Overstated - Digits - WSJ
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