Yasmin Green: How technology can fight extremism and online harassment
Yasmin Green is the director of research and development for Jigsaw, a unit within Alphabet Inc. focused on solving global security challenges through technology. Full bio
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reminds me of the setup
moves in to their perfect new home,
and the birds are chirping ...
new house isn't so perfect.
of the internet and all of its promise
of building search engines
and social networks,
were figuring out
platforms against us.
the foresight to stop them.
forces have come online to wreak havoc.
to set up a new group called Jigsaw,
from threats like violent extremism,
because I was born in Iran,
of a violent revolution.
that even if we had all of the resources
companies in the world,
and perpetrators of those threats.
I could talk to you about today.
the radicalization process,
of violent extremist groups.
at London Heathrow
to Syria to join ISIS.
and I said, "Why?"
of what life is like in Syria,
and live in the Islamic Disney World."
a jihadi Brad Pitt
and live happily ever after.
for each audience.
marketing material into.
radio shows and videos
French, Turkish, Kurdish,
video in sign language.
the deaf and hard of hearing.
ISIS wins hearts and minds.
the vulnerabilities, the desires
to focus on removing recruiting material.
at building meaningful technology
journey at its core.
who'd bought into ISIS's promise
the brutality of ISIS's rule.
prison in the north of Iraq
trained as a suicide bomber
of my prized possessions confiscated:
and digital liberty
that moment of loss to me.
and then Tom locks the door
of his throat as it travels down?"
the image that he was describing,
that he was trying to convey,
could have changed his mind
and the corruption, the brutality --
any contradictory information.
everything that you know now
would have changed my mind."
this yes-or-no choice.
people have questions --
the living conditions.
from people who have answers --
telling the story of their journey
I met in the Iraqi prison.
cell phone footage
in the caliphate under ISIS's rule.
peaceful interpretations of Islam.
the marketing prowess of ISIS.
and confront terrorist propaganda,
don't reach the people
if technology could change that.
to countering radicalization
those susceptible to ISIS's messaging
that are debunking that messaging.
for "How do I join ISIS?" --
of a cleric, of a defector --
not on a profile of who they are,
that's directly relevant
in English and Arabic,
or sympathy towards a jihadi group.
from making devastating choices.
isn't confined to any one language,
being deployed globally
by violent ideologues,
white supremacists
to hear from someone
a different path.
are good at exploiting the internet,
of technological geniuses,
what makes people tick.
to figure out what will resonate
you're told that you'll be raped,
is put online for everyone to see.
the thing that you were doing?
that's irritating your attacker?
until they're silenced.
hosting the conversation
and their forums altogether.
losing spaces online
with people who think just like us.
the spread of disinformation;
could enable empathy at scale?
that motivated our partnership
machine-learning models
the emotional impact of language.
were likely to make someone else leave
something like that.
these two examples of messages
difference to you,
are pretty much the same.
to teach the models
that can tell the difference
of the online toxicity phenomenon,
our technology called Perspective.
online for conversation.
on just 10 percent of their articles.
making moderators more efficient.
is landing with you.
could give commenters,
their words might land,
in a face-to-face conversation.
impact of language,
dialogue between people
that most of us have given up on.
to exploit and harm others,
and vulnerabilities.
that we could build an internet
the challenges that we face,
into understanding the issues
they aim to solve.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Yasmin Green - Geopolitical technologistYasmin Green is the director of research and development for Jigsaw, a unit within Alphabet Inc. focused on solving global security challenges through technology.
Why you should listen
Yasmin Green is the director of research and development for Jigsaw, a unit within Alphabet Inc. (formerly Google Ideas), focused on using tech tools to make the world safer, both on and offline. She has experience leading projects in some of the world’s toughest environments, including Iran, Syria, the UAE and Nigeria. In 2012, she led a multi-partner coalition to launch Against Violent Extremism, the world's first online network of former violent extremists and survivors of terrorism. Based on her own interviews with ISIS defectors and jailed recruits, last year Yasmin launched the Redirect Method, a new deployment of targeted advertising and video to confront online radicalization.
Green is a senior advisor on innovation to Oxford Analytica, a member of the Aspen Cyber Strategy Group, and until 2015 co-chaired the European Commission's Working Group on Online Radicalization. She was named one of Fortune's "40 Under 40" most influential young leaders in 2017, and in 2016 she was named one of Fast Company's "Most Creative People in Business."
Yasmin Green | Speaker | TED.com