She called on Elon Musk ’s X, Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, TikTok, Google and YouTube to “urgently review” material accessed by killer Axel Rudakubana - which she said is still available online. In a joint letter with Technology Secretary Peter Kyle Ms Cooper said the ease with which “such dangerous and illegal” content can be viewed was “unacceptable”.
The UK's interior minister, Yvette Cooper, announced on Thursday that a budget of nearly 6 million euros would be allocated to fund new local investigations into the scandal that has affected dozens of towns in central and northern England since 2000.
The Home Secretary has had to disown a report on extremism she herself commissioned - and it's given ammunition to Labour's enemies
The Home Secretary is said not to agree with the findings of the ‘rapid analytical sprint on extremism’ she commissioned following the summer riots.
Home Secretary warns that other attacks could be inspired by material that Axel Rudakubana is known to have accessed online
The Home Secretary has written to firms including Elon Musk’s X and Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta telling them to urgently review content.
Yvette Cooper is demanding Elon Musk’s X platform remove a violent terrorist video watched by triple killer Axel Rudakubana. The video – which shows a live-streamed knife attack by a terrorist ...
The Government will invest an extra £100 million into neighbourhood policing as it seeks to boost the number of officers on the ground. This adds to £100 million announced in December for England and Wales to put 13,000 more police officers on the streets by 2029.
The Government will invest an extra £100 million into neighbourhood policing as it seeks to boost the number of officers on the ground. This adds to £100 million announced in December for England and Wales to put 13,000 more police officers on the streets by 2029.
Two-tier policing claim is 'right-wing extremism', Home Office review suggests - Report suggests combating extremism should be based on ‘concerning’ behaviours rather than ideologies
(Alliance News) - Failing to remove extreme videos from social media could lead them to inspire further attacks like the Southport atrocity, Yvette Cooper has warned big tech companies.
The government has come under fire for refusing to hold a national inquiry into the abuse of young girls by networks of men