Online Hate Prevention Institute Explained

Online Hate Prevention Institute
Abbreviation:OHPI
Founding Location:Melbourne, Australia
Type:Charity
Tax Id:65155287657
Status:Active
Headquarters:Sydney, Australia
Location:Caulfield South, Victoria, Australia
Coords:-37.8852°N 145.0218°W
Language:English
Board Of Directors:Mark Civitella
Martin Splitter
Dr Nasya Bahfen
Dr David Wishart
Key People:Dr Andre Oboler (CEO)

Online Hate Prevention Institute (OHPI) is an independent harm prevention charity established in 2012 and based in Australia.

Overview

OHPI is recognised by the Government of Australia as a Harm Prevention Charity, listed on the Harm Prevention register by the Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs.[1] OHPI tackles a wide variety of forms of online hate speech. Work on antisemitism has been undertaken for the Global Forum for Combating Antisemitism,[2] while work on Islamophobia has been used by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.[3] The Institute is recommended as a source of specialist information on cyber Racism by the Australian Human Rights Commission,[4] and the eSafety Commissioner.[5]

The harm prevention charity also publishes a range of briefings and reports documenting examples of online hate. During the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, OHPI published a special series of reports documenting the slew of hate speech targeting people of Asian descent and misinformation surrounding the origin of the virus.[6]

Notable events

On 10 July 2014, Andre Oboler accused Facebook of refusing to enforce its community standards by allowing hate speech to remain online, stating that content is removed in the country where the report originated only and is still visible to others when viewed overseas.[7]

After Facebook decided to remove Holocaust denial content in October 2020, Oboler welcomed cautious optimism about the shift of policy on the platform. Oboler called the changes "certainly very welcome" to The New Daily, but mentioned the public has to "[wait] to see it delivered on, to make sure the change isn't just words."[8]

Oboler presented to the Asia Pacific Regional Forum on Hate Speech, Social Media and Minorities on 20 October 2020. The forum, organised by the Tom Lantos Institute and the United Nations Human Rights Special Rapporteur, sought to address human rights in the greater Asia-Pacific.[9] [10] Oboler spoke alongside representatives of Twitter and the Asia Centre.[11]

Oboler presented at the United Nations' thirteenth session of the Forum on Minority Issues on 20 November 2020. The forum focused on the theme of "Hate Speech, Social Media and Minorities" and was organised by the United Nations Human Rights Special Rapporteur on minority issues.[12] Oboler's presentation was part of the agenda item "Towards a safer space for minorities: positive initiatives to address online hate speech: the role of national human rights institutions, human rights organizations, civil society and other stakeholders" where he represented civil society alongside the Commissioner of the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia and the Director of the Facebook Oversight Board Administration.[13] Among other recommendations, Oboler called for governments to support a wider program of work by civil society to tackle online hate.[14]

The Inter-Parliamentary Task Force on Online Antisemitism also featured Oboler in late 2020, alongside Congresswoman and former Democratic National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Member of Parliament Josh Burns, and former Canadian Member of Parliament Michael Levitt, among many others.[15] [16] The task force addressed vulnerability of Jewish communities, the nature of online Semitism and recommendations for law makers and social media platforms.

Fight Against Hate

The Online Hate Prevention Institute developed a web based application titled Fight Against Hate to track response times by social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube in responding to reports of hate speech.[17] The Fight Against Hate website seems to have been discontinued in late 2023.[18]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mission and Vision. 2020-11-17. Online Hate Prevention Institute. en-US.
  2. Web site: 2016. Measuring the Hate: The State of Antisemitism in Social Media. Global Forum for Combatting Antisemitism.
  3. Web site: 2014. Report on Islamophobia. Organization of Islamic Cooperation.
  4. Web site: Cyber Racism Australian Human Rights Commission. 2020-11-17. humanrights.gov.au.
  5. Web site: Respect. eSafety Commissioner.
  6. Web site: Coronavirus. 2020-11-17. Online Hate Prevention Institute. en-US.
  7. Web site: Sharma. Mahesh. 2014-07-10. Facebook accused of allowing hate speech. 2020-11-17. The Sydney Morning Herald. en.
  8. Web site: 2020-10-13. Australian academic wins Facebook victory after a decade-long battle. 2020-11-17. The New Daily. en-US.
  9. Web site: OHPI Addresses Asia Pacific Regional Forum. 2020-11-17. Online Hate Prevention Institute. en-US.
  10. Web site: Asia-Pacific Regional Forum on Minority Issues 2020. 2020-11-17. tom-lantos-institue.events.idloom.com. en.
  11. Web site: Programme of Work of the Asia Pacific Regional Forum on Hate Speech, Social Media an Minorities.
  12. Web site: Thirteenth Session of the Forum on Minority Issues. 2021-02-12. United Nations. en.
  13. Web site: Thirteenth Session of the Forum on Minority Issues Programme of Work. 2021-02-12. United Nations. en.
  14. Web site: Address to the United Nations. 2021-02-12. Online Hate Prevention Institute. en.
  15. Web site: 2020-11-11. International task force discuss online antisemitism. 2020-11-17. J-Wire. en.
  16. Web site: In Germany, antisemitism on social media can be linked to offline violence. 2020-11-17. openDemocracy. en.
  17. News: Butler. Josh. 2016-09-22. It's Actually Illegal To Be Racist On The Internet. en-AU. Huffington Post. 2020-11-17.
  18. https://web.archive.org/web/20230901000000*/https://fightagainsthate.com