The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) produces a weekly report on the methods
used by extremist and terrorist groups on the Internet to spread their
ideologies and incite violence. Last week, CEP researchers identified around
three dozen accounts on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter/X that praised white
supremacist terrorism, including the Christchurch attack.
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Extremist Content Online: Extreme-Right And Neo-Nazi Content Located On
TikTok, Instagram, And Twitter/X
(New York, N.Y.) — The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) produces a weekly
report on the methods used by extremist and terrorist groups on the Internet to
spread their ideologies and incite violence. Last week, CEP researchers
identified around three dozen accounts on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter/X that
praised white supremacist terrorism, including the Christchurch attack.
Additionally, CEP researchers located an audio message from ISIS spokesperson
Abu Hudhayfah al-Ansari on RocketChat, Telegram, and pro-ISIS websites calling
for worldwide attacks on Jews and their allies across the globe as well as on
Western and Arab states. In another post on RocketChat, the pro-ISIS tech group
Qimam Electronic Foundation (QEF) shared a guide for inspecting suspicious URLs
to avoid clicking on harmful links.
CEP researchers located a video of the founder of the neo-Nazi group The Base
on a Russian video streaming platform recommending that followers prepare for
war and educating them via Telegram on ways to allegedly bypass the
restrictions of an AI assistant to potentially use it for criminal purposes.
Finally, on Twitter/X and Telegram, AI-generated content, antisemitic
rhetoric, and conspiracy theories, including blood libel, QAnon-related posts,
and others, were found in large quantities across the platforms following the
arrest of Jewish worshippers accused of unlawfully constructing a tunnel in a
Brooklyn synagogue.
Extreme-Right and Neo-Nazi Content, Including Content Glorifying White
Supremacist Terrorists, Located on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter/X
In a sample of content located on January 10, CEP researchers found 37
accounts on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter/X that spread extreme-right or
Neo-Nazi content or that glorified acts of terrorism committed by white
supremacists.
CEP found 18 accounts on TikTok that glorified or encouraged acts of violence.
Content included modified and unmodified footage from the Christchurch attack
video, including clips edited into longer violent videos. Other accounts
praised the white supremacist perpetrators of the 2015 Charleston church
shooting and the May 2022 Buffalo attack. Two accounts posted sections of the
manifestos of both the Christchurch attacker and the perpetrator of the August
2019 attack targeting Latinos at an El Paso Walmart. One account with over
1,000 subscribers specifically advocated for acts of violence against Jews. The
18 accounts had an average of 438 followers, ranging from 0 (in one instance)
to an account with 1,388 followers that expressed support for the attacks in
Christchurch, Halle, and Charleston.
CEP located nine extreme-right accounts on Instagram. Six accounts were
affiliated with white supremacist Active Clubs in Slovakia, Estonia, Ireland,
Brazil, and Romania, with one account for an affiliated group in New York, New
Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Other accounts located on Instagram posted
antisemitic and neo-Nazi propaganda. One account with over 70 followers posted
a video containing violent footage from the Christchurch and Buffalo terrorist
attacks. The nine accounts averaged 261 followers, ranging between 1 and 1,597.
Lastly, CEP researchers located ten extreme-right or neo-Nazi accounts on
Twitter/X. Four accounts, two created in November 2023 and two made in December
2023, were affiliated with Active Clubs in Romania, Ohio, Canada, and an area
in Missouri and Illinois. Six additional Twitter/X accounts were located that
posted violent footage from either the Christchurch or the Buffalo terrorist
attacks. Despite the low follower counts (0 to 39) of the Twitter/X accounts
that glorified or advocated for acts of terrorism, the violent videos they
posted received hundreds of views in some cases. An account with only one
follower posted a violent clip from the Christchurch attack in response to a
tweet from a far-right British politician. The video glorified the Christchurch
attacker and received over 700 views. A different account with only eight
followers posted a violent video clip glorifying the Buffalo attacker and
received over 550 views.
“TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter/X should significantly increase resources
devoted to identifying and immediately removing content from its platforms that
depict extreme violence, glorifies terrorists, and spreads extremist
propaganda. Tech companies are well aware of the scope of the threat to users
and the public, and they have a responsibility to uphold their content
moderation policies,” said CEP researcher Joshua Fisher-Birch. “Accounts
connected to Active Clubs, a known white supremacist movement recruiting around
the world, and that use standardized logos and symbols, should be removed.
Extremist and terrorist content is spreading on these major platforms, among
others, increasing the potential for radicalization, recruitment, and
real-world violence.”
CEP reported all accounts to relevant national authorities or TikTok,
Instagram, or Twitter/X. CEP directly reported six accounts to TikTok. Six days
later, three were removed, but accounts that remained on the platform glorified
white supremacist and antisemitic attackers. Of the eight accounts reported
directly to Instagram, only one was removed within the same time frame.
Accounts that were not removed from Instagram included those affiliated with
Active Clubs as well as profiles that posted antisemitic and anti-transgender
content. All the accounts reported to Twitter, which were connected to neo-Nazi
Active Clubs, were still on the platform six days later.
A post on Instagram advertising a Slovakian chapter of the Active Club
movement. Screenshot taken on January 11.
ISIS Spokesperson Calls for Global Attacks
In an audio message titled “And Kill Them Wherever You Find Them” released on
Telegram, RocketChat, and pro-ISIS websites on January 4, ISIS’s spokesperson
Abu Hudhayfah al-Ansari called for attacks around the world on the group’s
opponents.
Framing Israel’s military operations in Gaza as part of a long history of
conflict between Jews and Muslims, al-Ansari stated that the fight should be
religious and not fought under the banner of nationalism or non-religious
ideology. He went on to condemn Hamas for their supposed democratic character
and ties to Iran, whose regional ambitions were also denounced. Al-Ansari also
criticized Arab rulers for failing to support the Palestinian people and
allegedly allying with Israel, stating that the fight “is really a battle with
the allies of the Jews more so than with the Jews themselves.”
Al-Ansari called for ISIS’s supporters to commit attacks on Jews and their
allies around the globe, as well as against Western and Arab governments.
Following the release of the audio message, ISIS announced a global campaign
of offensives titled “And kill them wherever you find them.” On January 9, a
pro-ISIS Telegram account claimed that the terrorist group had committed 94
attacks around the world as part of the campaign in Syria, Nigeria, Congo,
Cameroon, Mali, the Philippines, Mozambique, Afghanistan, and Iraq. CEP
researchers counted 76 claimed ISIS attacks as part of the “And kill them
wherever you find them” campaign between January 4 and January 11.
Also, on January 9, a pro-ISIS Telegram channel defended al-Ansari’s call to
attack Arab Gulf states. The channel described these governments as Israel’s
rear line of defense. The post also stated that several countries host U.S.
military bases.
Pro-ISIS propaganda groups released posters following al-Ansari’s speech,
calling for attacks on civilians in the West, including attacks on synagogues
and churches.
ISIS’s Al-Furqan announcement for the “And Kill Them Wherever You Find Them”
audio message by spokesperson Abu Hudhayfah al-Ansari. Screenshot taken on
January 4.
Pro-ISIS Tech Group Posts Guide for Checking Potentially Suspicious URLs
On January 5, the pro-ISIS Qimam Electronic Foundation (QEF) posted a guide
via RocketChat for inspecting suspicious URLs. The guide recommended checking
websites via ScanURL, PhishTank, VirusTotal, and IPQualityScore’s suspicious
URL scanner to avoid harmful links. Members of other pro-ISIS rooms in
RocketChat have recently accused other users of posting potentially suspicious
links, including alleged links to content on other websites.
Qimam Electronic Foundation logo. Screenshot taken on January 11.
Founder of The Base Recommends AI Assistant, Urges Supporters to Prepare for
“War”
On January 9, the founder of the neo-Nazi group The Base, Rinaldo Nazzaro
<[link removed]>, recommended that
his followers on Telegram use a specific AI assistant to receive “uncensored
responses” to questions, including those “potentially criminal in nature.”
Nazzaro claimed that he did not technically advocate using the AI assistant for
illegal purposes but that it could be used for such. The AI assistant was
designed by a company that develops commercial machine-learning products.
On January 11, Nazzaro posted a video on a Russian video streaming website
telling his supporters that all their efforts regarding activism should be
preparing them for violent conflict. Nazzaro stated, “War, that’s what our aim
is. That’s what it needs to be, and everything we do needs to be geared towards
that goal. Towards gearing up for war, in terms of actual no-shit trigger
pullers that we need to recruit and the infrastructure which to support them.”
Nazzaro stated that community building or propaganda activities not geared
towards this goal were a waste of time. This message corresponds with some
previous propaganda released by The Base and elements of the online neo-Nazi
sphere that endorses violence. However, it was more direct than earlier
statements from Nazzaro.
Antisemitic and White Supremacist Online Accounts Spread Disinformation and
Propaganda, Including AI Generated Content, Related to Crown Heights Tunnel
Extreme right-wing and white supremacist accounts on Twitter/X and Telegram
spread a large quantity of disinformation andantisemitic
<[link removed]> propaganda following the
revealing
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of an illegal tunnel in the main synagogue of the Hasidic Chabad-Lubavitcher
movement in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. The NYPD arrested nine worshippers at the
synagogue on January 8 during a violent confrontation after a construction crew
began to fill in the tunnel. A Chabad spokespersonstated
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faction had allegedly constructed the tunnel connecting the synagogue with a
neighboring building.
Dozens of users on Twitter/X and Telegram posted antisemitic content in
response. A great deal of propaganda accused Jews of theblood libel
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conspiracy, accused Jews of engaging in pedophilia, or relied on antisemitic
tropes comparing Jews to rats. Numerous posts repackaged conspiracy theories
tied toPizzagate
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andQanon
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Telegram channels spread multiple pieces of antisemitic AI-generated content,
including one image portraying Jews as rodents that was posted within hours of
the tunnel receiving considerable attention online. The image received almost
7,000 views within three days.
Users of 4chan’s /pol board also posted a torrent of antisemitic content,
including memes and AI-generated content.
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