Technology

Israel and Hamas Engage in Social Media War

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

An Israeli soldier looks at the Facebook page of the IDF, at the IDF spokesperson office in Jerusalem. (Photo: AP/Sebastian Scheiner)

JERUSALEM (TheBlaze/AP) — The hostilities between Israel and Hamas have found a new battleground: social media.

The Israeli Defense Forces and Hamas militants have exchanged fiery tweets throughout the fighting in a separate war to influence public opinion.

Shortly after it launched its campaign Wednesday by killing Hamas’ top military commander Ahmed Jabari, the Israeli military’s media office announced a “widespread campaign on terror sites & operatives in the #Gaza Strip” on its Twitter account.

It then posted a 10-second black-and-white video of the airstrike on its official YouTube page. Google Inc., which owns YouTube, removed the video for a time early Thursday, but reconsidered and restored it.

A tweet from @idfspokesperson said: “We recommend that no Hamas operatives, whether low level or senior leaders, show their faces above ground in the days ahead.” Below is a small sampling of the tweets made by @idfspokesperson recently:

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

Hamas, under its @AlQassamBrigade English-language account, which is largely considered to be the official Twitter account for its military wing, fired back: “Our blessed hands will reach your leaders and soldiers wherever they are (You Opened Hell Gates on Yourselves).” Here are a few recent tweets from @AlQassamBrigade.

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

The Israeli military’s media office Twitter account, which gained more than 50,000 followers in just 24 hours — pretty much doubling the amount of followers it had prior — is just one of various online platforms used to relay real-time information to the public, sometimes even before it is conveyed to reporters.

The IDF news desk’s email signature reads like a catalog for new media platforms, including links to its YouTube channel, Facebook page and Flickr photo albums. The military also just opened a Tumblr account in English and plans to launch one in Spanish.

War Being Waged on Social Media Between Israel and Hamas

This photo was recently put up on IDF’s Facebook page. (Photo via Facebook)

Following the assassination, the military tweeted a graphically designed photograph of Jabari, with a red backdrop and capitalized block letters reading “ELIMINATED,” drawing both celebration and fierce criticism from a range of users. Throughout the operation, the military and its supporters have tweeted with the hashtag “IsraelUnderFire,” while many Palestinians have tweeted with a separate hashtag “GazaUnderAttack.”

The operation, launched after days of rocket fire from Gaza into southern Israel, marks the most intense round of violence since Israel and Hamas waged a three-week war four years ago.

Palestinian militants fired more rockets into Israel on Thursday, killing three people and striking the outskirts of Tel Aviv. Israeli strikes have killed 15 Palestinians.

Military spokeswoman Lt. Col. Avital Leibovitch said that in the four years since Israel and Hamas last dueled, an “additional war zone” developed on the internet.

“I’m sort of addicted to Twitter, you can say. It’s a great tool to release information without the touch of editors’ hands,” she said. “Militaries are usually closed operations, but we’re doing the opposite.”

Leibovitch is also the head of a two-month-old “Interactive Media” branch of the IDF, staffed with around 30 soldiers trained in writing and graphic-design skills. As an indicator of the significance of the department to the military, Leibovitch said she’ll be leaving her current spokeswoman’s post in February to focus solely on running the interactive branch.

The Hamas media wing has dramatically improved its outreach from the days when their loyalists used to scrawl graffiti on walls in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas’ militant wing keeps a frequently updated Facebook page and a multilanguage website. They tend to update reporters of rocket fire through an SMS distribution list.

Nader Elkhuzundar, a prolific 25-year-old Twitter user from Gaza, said the recent social media barrage reached “a new level of psychological war.”

“Twitter gives us a voice, but there’s also a lot of misinformation at the same time. It’s a tool you need to be careful using because there’s a lot of noise out there,” he said.

Although there were tweets directed at the IDF’s Twitter account claiming that the Israeli government and military websites were hacked and taken down Thursday, the Israeli military denied it.

“The IDF blog was down for a very short period, less than hour in the afternoon, only due to heavy traffic,” according to Eytan Buchman, an Israeli military spokesman.

Israel’s ministry of public diplomacy also started a “Special Operations Center,” a virtual situation room of sorts, working with Israeli bloggers and volunteers to “get Israeli’s message out to the world virtually, to Arabs as well, through social media and other web platforms,” said spokesman Gal Ilan.

Tamir Sheafer, chair of the political communication program at Hebrew University, said the embrace of social media by both sides indicates recognition that “you don’t win conflicts like this one on the ground; you win it through public opinion.”

But the use of social media for public diplomacy is also a double-edged sword, says Natan Sachs, a fellow at the Brookings Institute in Washington.

“On the one hand, Israel has gotten better in conveying their messages to the public, but on the flip side, we’re seeing flippant remarks. Twitter accounts can be used carelessly and there’s a danger of overplaying things, which they might be doing,” he said.

“They also might be falling into the trap of thinking they have their public relations covered, but really, it’s their policy and not their tweets that matters at the end of the day,” Sachs added.

YouTube had removed the Hamas assassination video after concluding the clip violated its terms of service. The site’s reviewers later reconsidered that decision and restored the video Thursday.

“With the massive volume of videos on our site, sometimes we make the wrong call,” YouTube said in a statement.

Buchman, the Israeli military spokesman, said there was no official comment, except that “we’re glad they reconsidered that decision.”

Google tries to ensure that the clips on YouTube obey disparate laws around the world and adhere to standards of decorum while also protecting the principles of free speech. It’s a mind-boggling task, given more than 100,000 hours of video is sent to YouTube every day.

YouTube routinely blocks video in specific countries if it violates local laws. It also removes video deemed to violate standards primarily designed to weed out videos that infringe copyrights, show pornography or contain “hate speech.”

Given that YouTube isn’t regulated by the government, Google is within its legal rights to make its own decisions about video. Fox example, Google refused to remove the anti-Islam video that was at one point cited as the onus for the attacks on Benghazi in September.

Nevertheless, some people believe Google should always fall on the side of free expression because YouTube has become such an important forum for opinion, commentary and news.

A video showing an assassination arguably falls in a gray area of whether it is a news event or a gratuitous act of violence.

This isn’t the only assassination that can be watched on YouTube. Numerous clips on YouTube replay the fatal shooting of U.S. President John F. Kennedy in 1963, including his gruesome head wound.

Google doesn’t share details about how its video reviews are conducted, but it employs an unknown number of reviewers who regularly scan the site for violations of local laws and the company’s guidelines.

Google discussed its approach to Internet content in a November 2007 blog post that came about a year after buying YouTube for $1.76 billion.

“We have a bias in favor of people’s right to free expression in everything we do,” wrote Rachel Whetstone, Google’s director of global communications and public affairs, “We are driven by a belief that more information generally means more choice, more freedom and ultimately more power for the individual. But we also recognize that freedom of expression can’t be – and shouldn’t be – without some limits. The difficulty is in deciding where those boundaries are drawn.”

Usually, the decisions are dictated by the law in the more than 100 different countries where Google’s services are offered. The laws in some countries prohibit material that would seem tame in other countries. For instance, Brazil prohibits video ridiculing political candidates in the three months leading up to an election, while Germany outlaws content featuring Nazi paraphernalia. Google did block the anti-Mohammed movie in September at the request of some specific countries.

In the first half of this year alone, Google said it received more than 1,700 court orders and other requests from government agencies around the world to remove more than 17,700 different pieces of content from its services.

The company rejects many of these demands. For instance, Google says it complied with less than half of the U.S. court orders and government orders take down nearly 4,200 pieces of content from January through June.

AP Technology Writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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Comments (29)

  • judyaz
    Posted on November 16, 2012 at 1:29am

    I often wonder why YouTube chooses to accuse some of violating their “terms of service” over and over and over and over and over. At least, that’s what happens to the original videos I wrote, edited and produced. I have written permission from the music company to use their instrumentals for this and thank them in the credits. Yet, no matter how many times I answer YouTubes’s limiting my videos, and get approved again, invariably again and again and again they falsely accuse me of using someone else’s music than the company who published it. They even come up with different musicians, all who did not make this rendition. So I have the impression their reviews are subjective and prejudicial, or they would have accepted what they already accepted, again and again and again and again. I have shown them many times, and I have written permissions. One time it was even my friend playing Christmas songs on the church organ. And the other material is original and true, for which I also have written permission to use. One might wonder if they have a prejudiced, religious agenda and simply harass some?

    Report this comment

    judyaz  
  • badge02812
    Posted on November 15, 2012 at 11:30pm

    In 1799 Napoleon Bonaparte was first to proclaim Palestine a “Jewish State”
    Proclaimed the Jews the “rightful Heirs Of Palestine” and even offered them French protection.
    Israel the great nation which does not trade in men and countries as did those which sold your ancestors unto all people (Joel,4,6)
    Hasten !, Now is the moment, which may not return for thousands of years, to claim the restoration of civic rights among the population of the universe which had been shamefully withheld from you for thousands of years, your political existence as a nation among the nations, and the unlimited natural right to worship Jehovah in accordance with your faith, publicly and most probably forever (JoeI 4,20).
    signed,
    Bonaparte. 1799.

    Report this comment

    badge02812  
    • PatriotofPast
      Posted on November 16, 2012 at 9:09am

      No Badge, I believe it was a little bit Before 1799… I do believe it was closer to 4 Thousand years earlier when Moses brought GODS People to THAT LAND.

      Report this comment

      PatriotofPast  
  • Keatonc333
    Posted on November 15, 2012 at 11:15pm

    I’m so tired of our welfare brat Israel getting in these situations then asking us to bail them out! not this time israel! we have our own problems! Libertarians unite!

    Report this comment

    Keatonc333  
  • Alina.D
    Posted on November 15, 2012 at 10:21pm

    Israel always in my prayers.. Also, I am a frequent visitor and a fan of IDF on facebook and youtube. Its great that they keep us informed on whats happening. God bless Israel!!

    Report this comment

    Alina.D  
    • unmanned
      Posted on November 16, 2012 at 11:47pm

      I thought the jews was supposed to be the ones making all them ******* movies and hollywood biased stuff.

      Report this comment

      unmanned  
  • Individualism
    Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:30pm

    let them fight and eat some popcorn and watch.

    Report this comment

    Individualism  
    • Stelex
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:38pm

      When your house is burning down and your gasping for air in a smoke filled room, I’ll be right over. I got your back, unless its inconvenient. JAGOV

      Report this comment

      Stelex  
    • ArmedAndReallyPissed
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 9:12pm

      NO NO NO. Your photo is all wrong. Your standing in front of an AMERICAN Flag !!! You want to be in front of ( or draped in ) a COMMUNIST Flag. Stooge.

      Report this comment

      ArmedAndReallyPissed  
    • Individualism
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 9:33pm

      sorry i don’t have an israeli flag.

      Report this comment

      Individualism  
    • ArmedAndReallyPissed
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 9:45pm

      You don’t deserve to be in the same picture with either. I’m done. Your not worth another comment.

      Report this comment

      ArmedAndReallyPissed  
    • Keatonc333
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 11:14pm

      I think you’re worth another comment!

      Report this comment

      Keatonc333  
    • Alina.D
      Posted on November 16, 2012 at 1:47am

      Isaiah 34:8-10 For it is the day of the Lord’s punishment, when he gives payment for the wrongs done to Zion.
      And its streams will be turned into boiling oil, and its dust into burning stone, and all the land will be on fire.
      It will not be put out day or night; its smoke will go up for ever: it will be waste from generation to generation; no one will go through it for ever.

      Report this comment

      Alina.D  
  • Stelex
    Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:28pm

    Its official, all our leaders are children, there are no adults, the inmates are running the prison. We the People are screwed. Its amazing to me that we can’t as a society seem to grasp the fact that if you want a job in gov……..by default your ego centric and probably a megalomaniac by default. Reluctant servants are whats needed but unfortunately….Americans want president Kardashian, president JZ, president pretty…….President rational is no longer an option…….Welcome to IDIOCRACY.

    Report this comment

    Stelex  
  • sparkyrules
    Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:28pm

    Hamas is like those silly racist, but funny public domain cartoons from the past.They’ve never evolved,just stuck in the past.We can always watch them and wonder why they do the things they do.Its a cartoon after all,and funny.
    But sometimes reality kicks in.That’s where the cartoon meets Mr. IDF. and Shayetet 13.

    Report this comment

    sparkyrules  
    • ArmedAndReallyPissed
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 9:42pm

      Funny Cartoons from the past…..?????…….You mean like the Twin Towers funny ? These Terrorists are the same group that have killed thousands of Americans. I’m guessing you just didn’t really think out your comment before you typed it. I’ll bet if 100′s of Rockets were hitting the USA everyday, NO ONE would be thinking it’s “funny” or “Cartoon like”.

      Report this comment

      ArmedAndReallyPissed  
    • sparkyrules
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 10:46pm

      Well,Sunshine(armedandreallypissed),you have no idea.Grow up.Mom and Dad fight the good fight for you sweetie.But you can always educate yourself in the mean time

      Report this comment

      sparkyrules  
    • Keatonc333
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 11:17pm

      hundreds of rockets?

      Report this comment

      Keatonc333  
  • Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra
    Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:27pm

    Social war, Civil war, Shooting War, War of Words. At least they aren’t engaging in Cola Wars or trying to fight out their differences in World of Warcraft. Hopefully they realize War…unnfff, What is it Good for, absolutely nothing. Say it again.

    In the end the only ones that get hurt are those left alive, and all those Palestinian War Widows, grazing out in the fields and Baahhhing.

    Report this comment

    Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra  
    • Stelex
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:32pm

      Sometimes war is necessary. I suspect you’ll realize that within the next few years. Pacifism is great until your really hurting………we will be really hurting soon. Love your posts by the way. But there is a time to stand your ground. Or not, but “Or not” isn’t my path

      Report this comment

      Stelex  
    • barber2
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:46pm

      STEL: Agree. In WWII Hitler was determined to conquer the world to create his perfect Reich . Today we see Islamic crazies wanting to convert the world and establish their Reich/ Caliphate. Sometimes war is necessary if you do not share the goals of those who are determined to conquer you and they are unwilling to allow you that choice.

      Report this comment

      barber2  
    • Stelex
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 8:49pm

      Just to avoid any confusion ….. I back Israel

      Report this comment

      Stelex  
    • Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra
      Posted on November 15, 2012 at 10:00pm

      @Stelex
      I am no pacifist, lock and loaded Brother. And a great effective range. The question is not am I carrying, it’s what caliber.

      Report this comment

      Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra  

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