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Syrian Archive
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Lost and Found

Syrian Archive’s work on content taken down from social media platforms

We have reinstated 650,000+ records to social media platforms

Syrian Archive’s work on content taken down from social media platforms

Gaining physical access to be able to investigate and report on human rights violations in Syria is very limited and dangerous for independent journalists, international news agencies, UN investigation bodies and international human rights organisations. This is the main reason Syrian Archive and other documentation groups depend on verified user generated content to assist in criminal case building as well as human rights research.

In the Syrian conflict, there are more hours of videos documenting the conflict than there have been hours in the conflict itself. Even now, eight years after the Syrian conflict began in 2011, more than 50 videos are uploaded to YouTube each day, making it an “accidental archive” that arguably allows anyone in the world to witness a conflict for the first time in history, practically in real time.

For this reason, since 2014 we have archived content from thousands of social media channels and accounts - images, videos, and posts that are both invaluable historical artifacts and potential evidence of human rights abuses. Some of these channels are long-standing media houses that have been documenting human rights violations in Syria since 2011.

Over the past few years we have led the field in discussions on content moderation through our advocacy and policy work. Our organisation is one of the only groups worldwide who has quantitative data on the real impact of content moderation policies, as well a qualitative data on the types of content being removed. This includes our monthly publication of statistics highlighting summary statistics of content made unavailable that we have securely preserved on our infrastructure.

It also includes engaging with press to advocate for a more critical approach towards content moderation implementation, working with social media companies to reinstate hundreds of thousands of records, writing policy papers addressing the risks of content moderation policies on human rights documentation, and involvement in the Christchurch Call Advisory network.

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Monthly takedown updates

reports

report

The Impact of COVID-19 on Content Moderation

June 11, 2020

One year of measuring content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Caught in the Net: The Impact of Extremist Speech Regulations on Human Rights Content

June 3, 2019

A joint publication from the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Syrian Archive, and Witness


monthly updates

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: May 2020

May 30, 2020

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: May 2020

May 30, 2020

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: February to April 2020

April 30, 2020

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: December 2019 to January 2020

January 31, 2020

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: November 2019

November 30, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: October 2019

October 31, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: September 2019

September 30, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: August 2019

August 31, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: July 2019

July 31, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: June 2019

June 4, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: May 2019

May 30, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored

report

Removals of Syrian human rights content: April 2019

April 29, 2019

Amount of content preserved, made unavailable and restored


press release

press release

Syrian Archive Joins Christchurch Call Advisory Network

October 2, 2019

Syrian Archive Joins Christchurch Call Advisory Network


The Syrian Archive is fully independent and accepts no money from governments directly involved in the Syrian conflict. We are seeking individual donations to carry out our work. Please consider supporting our work through our Patreon page.

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