Live streaming motivated the Buffalo shooter; If Sandy Hook and Newtown did not change gun laws nothing will

I think it should be shown to everybody every day just like George Floyd. That is the only way we can get a change in the gun laws in this country. If they showed the babies get killed in class room in New town we would have new gun laws now If white people don’t give a damn about the killing of white children. Sandy Hook and New Town did not change you to change your gun laws in this country nothing will.

Twitch says it managed to take down the live stream of the weekend mass shooting in Buffalo within two minutes after it started. However, videos of the shooting have been viewed millions of times, in part because it remains easy to re-upload copies of videos to multiple platforms.

Why it matters: Live-streaming mass shooting events can give assailants assurance that their crimes will live online for many years.

Catch up quick: Authorities are investigating the mass shooting by an 18-year-old white man as a hate crime and a case of “racially motivated violent extremism.”

Details: The shooter wore a camera during the attack and posted the footage in real-time to Twitch, the live-streaming platform owned by Amazon that often features live videos of video gaming.

The big picture: Tech platforms said they were quick to identify the video as a violation of their policies and removed it shortly thereafter, but copies of the video still circulated online for hours after the live stream ended.

What they’re saying: New York Gov. Kathy Hochul criticized the various social media platforms for both inspiring the shooter and allowing the videos of the attack to circulate. “This spreads like a virus,” Hochul said, per the New York Times.

Be smart: The Department of Homeland Security has cited a pattern amongst some mass shooters of watching and studying videos online of other mass shooting events, like the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.

Between the lines: Tech firms have long struggled to identify and block videos of mass shootings and other gruesome events that are live-streamed or uploaded to their platforms as the violence is taking place.

What’s next: Once gruesome content has been identified, tech firms often work with third-party groups, like the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism, to share examples of content via a shared database that helps other companies detect and prevent future uploads of the same material.

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