Our picksMonitoring Extremist Chatter | Cybersecurity Ignorance Is Dangerous | Deadly Force Rules for Terrorist Suspects, and more

Published 4 May 2021

·  Biden Team May Partner with Private Firms to Monitor Extremist Chatter Online

·  From Memes to Race War: How Extremists Use Popular Culture to Lure Recruits

·  British Government Bans Atomwaffen Division as Criminal Terrorist Organization

·  Met Dismisses Police Officer Who Belonged to Banned Neo-Nazi Terror Group

·  Biden Administration Releases Trump-Era Deadly Force Rules for Terrorist Suspects Abroad

·  Far-Right Terror Suspects Arrested in Yorkshire, Wiltshire and Wales

·  Canadian Chapter of the Proud Boys, Designated a Terrorist Group by The Government, Says It Has ‘Dissolved’

·  Cybersecurity Ignorance Is Dangerous

Biden Team May Partner with Private Firms to Monitor Extremist Chatter Online  (Zachary Cohen and Katie Bo Williams, CNN)
The Biden administration is considering using outside firms to track extremist chatter by Americans online, an effort that would expand the government’s ability to gather intelligence but could draw criticism over surveillance of US citizens. The Department of Homeland Security is limited in how it can monitor citizens online without justification and is banned from activities like assuming false identities to gain access to private messaging apps used by extremist groups such as the Proud Boys or Oath Keepers. Instead, federal authorities can only browse through unprotected information on social media sites like Twitter and Facebook and other open online platforms. A source familiar with the effort said it is not about decrypting data but rather using outside entities who can legally access these private groups to gather large amounts of information that could help DHS identify key narratives as they emerge. The plan being discussed inside DHS, according to multiple sources, would, in effect, allow the department to circumvent those limits. In response to CNN’s story, DHS said it “is not partnering with private firms to surveil suspected domestic terrorists online” and “it is blatantly false” to suggest that the department is using outside firms to circumvent its legal limits.

From Memes to Race War: How Extremists Use Popular Culture to Lure Recruits  (Marc Fisher, Washington Post)
The first images of “The Last Battle” seem designed to rile people on the conservative side of the culture wars: public nudity, strippers, children dressed in drag — symbols of a society supposedly in a moral free fall. Then the online video pivots to more extreme material: quick-cut scenes of attacks on White people, bogus allegations of election fraud and a parade of pictures purporting to show “the Jewish Communist takeover.” (Cont.)