“Incels” are an online community of mostly young men, some of whom promote violent hatred of women. In the online world, violent extremism is evolving in ever more fluid ways — with fatal consequences in the real world.
Film supported by @mishcondereya
See more from our Now & Next series: [ Ссылка ]
00:00 - How the internet is changing violent extremism
01:10 - The radicalisation superhighway
02:50 - The myth of the lone wolf
03:47 - Incels, QAnon and the digital sphere
04:20 - Violent subcultures and niche communities
05:31 - Alt-right and far right groups
07:30 - Instant, endless misinformation
07:59 - Andrew Tate and the normalisation of hate
09:15 - AdTech, interception and prevention
View all of The Economist’s international coverage: [ Ссылка ]
Sign up to our newsletter The World In Brief: [ Ссылка ]
Listen to an episode of “The Economist Asks” podcast about what makes an extremist: [ Ссылка ]
Read about how America’s far right were energised by covid-19 lockdowns: [ Ссылка ]
Why white nationalist terrorism is a global threat: [ Ссылка ]
Find out why tech giants are under fire for facilitating terrorism: [ Ссылка ]
What its chosen reading says about America’s far-right? [ Ссылка ]
The charm of cryptocurrencies for white supremacists: [ Ссылка ]
What is the “Great Replacement” right-wing conspiracy theory? [ Ссылка ]
In America, far-right terrorist plots have outnumbered far-left ones in 2020: [ Ссылка ]
Why free speech, hate speech and radicalisation are hard to define: [ Ссылка ]
America grapples with a lethal mix of terrorism and lax gun laws: [ Ссылка ]
Should the tech giants be liable for content?: [ Ссылка ]
Incels: how online extremism is changing
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