Mobile video is changing the way we witness crime, from live footage of a mentally disabled man
tortured by four assailants , to a recording that led to the manslaughter conviction of an Israeli
soldier , to the body cameras designed to keep police accountable.
We're all still wrestling with the implications.
tortured by four assailants , to a recording that led to the manslaughter conviction of an Israeli
soldier , to the body cameras designed to keep police accountable.
We're all still wrestling with the implications.
Scene of the crime
It's not clear how any of that might have played out in an incident on this week, when attackers
used Facebook Live to stream the beating and torture of a man with mental health problems.
They threatened him with a knife, cut off his clothing and forced him to drink from a toilet.
It's not clear how any of that might have played out in an incident on this week, when attackers
used Facebook Live to stream the beating and torture of a man with mental health problems.
They threatened him with a knife, cut off his clothing and forced him to drink from a toilet.
The assault went on for up to two days, according to police, though it's unclear how much of it was
streamed on Facebook Live. Police have arrested four people in connection with the crime.
streamed on Facebook Live. Police have arrested four people in connection with the crime.
Last year, an Ohio woman plead not guilty to charges of rape, kidnapping and other crimes for
live-streaming the rape of a friend on Periscope, Twitter's live-streaming app. Prosecutors said
Marina Lonina continued to film the assault despite the victim's cries for help, caught up in the
attention the livestream was getting. Lonina's attorney said she was recording the attack as
evidence.
live-streaming the rape of a friend on Periscope, Twitter's live-streaming app. Prosecutors said
Marina Lonina continued to film the assault despite the victim's cries for help, caught up in the
attention the livestream was getting. Lonina's attorney said she was recording the attack as
evidence.
Facebook's role
Facebook says it does not allow people to "to celebrate or glorify crimes" on its site. It has
already removed the original video of the Chicago incident for that reason.
Facebook says it does not allow people to "to celebrate or glorify crimes" on its site. It has
already removed the original video of the Chicago incident for that reason.
raise awareness about it," the company said in an emailed statement.
That can lead to tricky assessments of intent. Facebook, for instance, wrote in a blog post that it would allow a violent video posted by someone who used it to help find the shooter, but would remove it when posted by another person who mocked the victim or celebrated violence.
Facebook generally tries to avoid making such judgments, preferring to rely on algorithms that
automatically filter out banned content such as pornography. When it makes exceptions, it often
wades into difficult territory - such as the time it was forced to restore the Pulitzer Prize-winning
"napalm girl" photo after removing it because it features a naked child, blind to the photo's
historical context and significance.
automatically filter out banned content such as pornography. When it makes exceptions, it often
wades into difficult territory - such as the time it was forced to restore the Pulitzer Prize-winning
"napalm girl" photo after removing it because it features a naked child, blind to the photo's
historical context and significance.
"We understand the unique challenges of live video," Facebook wrote in its July blog post after
footage of a dying Philando Castile, bleeding inside a car after he was shot by police, went viral.
The social network says it keeps a team on-call 24 hours a day to respond to reports of
inappropriate video - though its reactive approach means that some material could easily
go unreported.
footage of a dying Philando Castile, bleeding inside a car after he was shot by police, went viral.
The social network says it keeps a team on-call 24 hours a day to respond to reports of
inappropriate video - though its reactive approach means that some material could easily
go unreported.
Facebook Live is an important product for Facebook, and in recent months the company has
gone to great lengths to promote it with notifications, sidewalk ad displays and TV commercials.
The vast majority of live streams don't involve crime, and Facebook is unlikely to rein back the
product just because of a few difficult situations.
gone to great lengths to promote it with notifications, sidewalk ad displays and TV commercials.
The vast majority of live streams don't involve crime, and Facebook is unlikely to rein back the
product just because of a few difficult situations.
More civic-minded streaming lets people "bypass traditional media and connect directly with their
social networks and the general public," he said. Live streaming is powerful, he added, because
it "produces really strong emotions in viewers, which can be used to unify or divide people."
social networks and the general public," he said. Live streaming is powerful, he added, because
it "produces really strong emotions in viewers, which can be used to unify or divide people."
Online crime footage has been around much longer than live streams. While live broadcast gives
them a sense of immediacy, many live videos only go viral well after the fact. So it may not really
matter whether a video is live or not, just that it's a concrete record of a crime that happened,
visible to all who dare to click.
them a sense of immediacy, many live videos only go viral well after the fact. So it may not really
matter whether a video is live or not, just that it's a concrete record of a crime that happened,
visible to all who dare to click.
In another case in Ohio, the two sides in the trial clashed over a video from a police officer's
body-worn camera that showed him shooting an unarmed man following a traffic stop. That case
also ended in mistrial. The officer, Ray Tensing, will be retried.
body-worn camera that showed him shooting an unarmed man following a traffic stop. That case
also ended in mistrial. The officer, Ray Tensing, will be retried.
But it wasn't just fun and games. Fights and violence also found a home on Vine under the hashtag #SmackCam - a 2013 "internet trend" that had people recording and posting videos of themselves hitting people in the face.
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