August 3, 2011 1:11 PM PDT
White House: Need to monitor online 'extremism'

by Declan McCullagh

http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20087677-281/white-house-need-to-monitor-online-extremism/

A White House terrorism strategy released today says Facebook, Twitter, and 
other social networks aid in "advancing violent extremist narratives" and 
should be monitored by the government.

The 12-page strategy (PDF), which outlines ways to respond to violent 
extremism, promises that: "We will continue to closely monitor the important 
role the Internet and social-networking sites play in advancing violent 
extremist narratives."

President Obama said in a statement accompanying the report that the federal 
government will start "helping communities to better understand and protect 
themselves against violent extremist propaganda, especially online."

While much of the White House document is focused on al Qaeda--which The 
Washington Post recently reported is on the "brink of collapse"--it also talks 
about domestic terrorists, neo-Nazis, anti-Semitic groups, and a broad "range 
of ideologies" that promote radicalization.
 
Today's announcement may signal that monitoring of social networks will broaden 
beyond the U.S. Department of Homeland Security already does. Depending on the 
details, it could also raise concerns about how to balance Americans' privacy 
rights with desire of security agencies to collect and analyze information that 
is, more or less, publicly available.

In June 2010, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security confirmed publicly (PDF) 
that its agents were permitted to create accounts on social-networking sites in 
some situations.

DHS's National Operations Center "will monitor activities on the social-media 
sites" using search engines, aggregators, and other tools, last year's 
announcement said. "The NOC will gather, store, analyze, and disseminate 
relevant and appropriate de-identified information to federal, state, local, 
and foreign governments, and private sector partners..."

In addition, the Electronic Frontier Foundation unearthed documents showing 
that DHS officials were sending "friend" requests to people applying for U.S. 
citizenship. DHS conducted extensive monitoring of social networks during 
Obama's inauguration.

In 2009, CIA investment arm In-Q-Tel invested in Visible Technologies, which 
monitors millions of posts on social-networking Web sites, Wired reported. Tax 
collectors, too, are "nabbing scofflaws by mining information posted on 
social-networking Web sites," according to The Wall Street Journal, and the FBI 
has previously supported legislation that would allow federal police to monitor 
the Internet for "illegal activity."

This move toward monitoring social networks hasn't been without controversy. A 
New York Times editorial suggested these techniques may go too far: "If 
government agents are joining social networks under false pretenses to spy 
without a court order, for example, that might be crossing a line."

It's also not been limited to the United States.

In 2009, the U.K. Home Office announced that it would monitor all conversations 
on social-networking sites, including Facebook, MySpace, Bebo, Twitter, and 
Skype, in a crackdown on terrorists' use of the Internet. So has the Chilean 
government. And, of course, some repressive regimes have simply blocked Web 
sites completely.


Declan McCullagh E-mail Declan McCullagh
 
Declan McCullagh is the chief political correspondent for CNET. Declan 
previously was a reporter for Time and the Washington bureau chief for Wired 
and wrote the Taking Liberties section and Other People's Money column for CBS 
News' Web site.

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