Images, videos of
beheaded journalist removed from Twitter
File
photo of
The gruesome, almost five-minute-long video titled
"A Message to America" surfaced Tuesday, confronting Twitter and
other online platforms with a quandry over whether to allow their sites,
normally committed to free expression, to be used to propagate graphic
material like that in the video.
The video shows the execution of journalist James Foley
by a masked militant and a warning that the group intends to kill a second
captive journalist unless the
Images of the beheading in an open desert area began
disappearing from Twitter at around the same time as Costolo's message was
posted.
YouTube also removed the video from its site in
accordance with its policy against "violent or gory content that's
primarily intended to be shocking, sensational or disrespectful."
On Tuesday, Twitter had said it would take down photos
of dead individuals if requested by family, going a step beyond its previous
rules. That followed the apparent suicide of Hollywood star Robin Williams,
whose daughter, Zelda Williams, quit social media last week, upset by
Internet "trolls" defacing images of her Oscar-winning dad.
"Twitter will remove imagery of deceased
individuals in certain circumstances," a statement posted by senior
manager of communications, Nu Wexler, said. "Immediate family members
and other authorized individuals may request the removal of images or video
of deceased individuals, from when critical injury occurs to the moments
before or after death," it said.
Source AFP, AP
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Thứ Tư, 20 tháng 8, 2014
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