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Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’
Law Quarterly Review
Swansea University Author: Stuart Macdonald
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PDF | Accepted Manuscript
Author accepted manuscript document released under the terms of a Creative Commons CC-BY licence using the Swansea University Research Publications Policy (rights retention).
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Abstract
The Online Safety Act creates the power to impose a Terrorism Content Notice on providers of user-to-user services, requiring them to identify and swiftly remove terrorism content that has been communicated publicly, not privately. A distinction between public and private communications has also bee...
Published in: | Law Quarterly Review |
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa66716 |
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2024-11-04T16:09:28.2853991 v2 66716 2024-06-12 Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ 933e714a4cc37c3ac12d4edc277f8f98 0000-0002-7483-9023 Stuart Macdonald Stuart Macdonald true false 2024-06-12 HRCL The Online Safety Act creates the power to impose a Terrorism Content Notice on providers of user-to-user services, requiring them to identify and swiftly remove terrorism content that has been communicated publicly, not privately. A distinction between public and private communications has also been drawn in the practical application of the encouragement of terrorism offence, to which Terrorism Content Notices are inextricably linked via the definition of terrorism content. This article argues that this dichotomous public/private approach is flawed. Through an examination of how Islamic State disseminates its propaganda online, the article demonstrates empirically that such content may be communicated publicly in (what some might regard as) private settings. It discusses various factors that might be considered when answering what should be the key question – whether the content was communicated publicly or not – including the number of users that are able to access the statement and any restrictions on access. Journal Article Law Quarterly Review terrorism, counterterrorism, privacy, propaganda, criminal law, Online Safety Act 0 0 0 0001-01-01 COLLEGE NANME Hillary Rodham Clinton Law School COLLEGE CODE HRCL Swansea University 2024-11-04T16:09:28.2853991 2024-06-12T21:06:44.1570789 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Hilary Rodham Clinton School of Law Stuart Macdonald 0000-0002-7483-9023 1 Jonathan Hall 2 66716__30625__2a20f48f3bac47fd82909a43334e40d4.pdf Cronfa.pdf 2024-06-12T21:12:20.6098740 Output 398108 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true Author accepted manuscript document released under the terms of a Creative Commons CC-BY licence using the Swansea University Research Publications Policy (rights retention). true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en |
title |
Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ |
spellingShingle |
Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ Stuart Macdonald |
title_short |
Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ |
title_full |
Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ |
title_fullStr |
Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ |
title_full_unstemmed |
Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ |
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Publicising Terrorism in Private: Criminal Law, Online Safety and the Meaning of ‘Public Communications’ |
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Stuart Macdonald Jonathan Hall |
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The Online Safety Act creates the power to impose a Terrorism Content Notice on providers of user-to-user services, requiring them to identify and swiftly remove terrorism content that has been communicated publicly, not privately. A distinction between public and private communications has also been drawn in the practical application of the encouragement of terrorism offence, to which Terrorism Content Notices are inextricably linked via the definition of terrorism content. This article argues that this dichotomous public/private approach is flawed. Through an examination of how Islamic State disseminates its propaganda online, the article demonstrates empirically that such content may be communicated publicly in (what some might regard as) private settings. It discusses various factors that might be considered when answering what should be the key question – whether the content was communicated publicly or not – including the number of users that are able to access the statement and any restrictions on access. |
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0001-01-01T02:49:29Z |
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