-
New hunt for flight MH370 ends with no clues to 12-year mystery
-
Kuwait airport, Bahrain desalination unit struck as Iran presses Gulf attacks
-
F1 world champion Norris fears 'long, tough season'
-
Russell takes pop at rival Norris over 'worst F1 cars' claim
-
'Whole country will stop' as India dreams of home World Cup glory
-
Leclerc 'positively surprised' by Ferrari but says more work needed
-
Djokovic says Alcaraz equipped to extend winning streak
-
Russell warns that Mercedes must raise game despite Australia 1-2
-
China FM urges US to manage differences in face of trade woes
-
Piastri takes blame for crashing out before home Australian Grand Prix
-
Turkey's jailed mayor says demand for change cannot be stopped
-
Venezuela frees more political prisoners under amnesty law
-
Dominant Russell wins Australian Grand Prix in Mercedes 1-2
-
Alcaraz cruises into Indian Wells third round, Djokovic fights through
-
Iran says can fight for months as Israel strikes Beirut hotel
-
Sri Lanka hospital releases 22 rescued Iranian sailors
-
USA rout Britain after nervy start in World Baseball Classic
-
Young Chinese parents tighten belts as childcare costs rise
-
Sony faces $2.7 bn class action from UK PlayStation users
-
Thunder secure 50th win as Gilgeous-Alexander nears record
-
Nepal's rapper-led centrist party heads for poll landslide
-
White House UFC event to be headlined by Topuria-Gaethje
-
Philippines' 'Cockroach Lord' goes to bat for misunderstood bugs
-
Piastri out of Australian Grand Prix after crashing in lead-up
-
US court voids mass layoffs at Voice of America parent
-
Explosion at US embassy in Oslo, no injuries
-
India's economy is booming, but uneven growth clouds ascent
-
German state election a test for Chancellor Merz
-
Israeli strike kills four at Beirut hotel: Lebanon
-
'One Battle After Another' location manager explains THAT car chase
-
Why have 1,000 ships at times lost their GPS in the Mideast?
-
Kuwait airport, Saudi Arabia targeted as Iran presses Gulf attacks
-
Djokovic battles back to win Indian Wells opener
-
Thompson strike seals US victory in SheBelieves Cup
-
Berger's lead narrows at rain-hit Arnold Palmer
-
Netanyahu vows to press Iran war as Trump honors slain US troops
-
Messi bags 899th goal as Miami down DC United
-
Turkey warns over 'dangerous' bid to stir civil war in Iran
-
Yamal bends Barca past Bilbao, Atletico edge Real Sociedad
-
Marseille take revenge on Toulouse and rise to third in Ligue 1
-
New attacks in Gulf as Iran vows for more
-
Yamal class secures Barca narrow win at Athletic Bilbao
-
Man City hand Newcastle brutal FA Cup lesson as Chelsea survive scare
-
Rybakina holds off Baptiste in testing Indian Wells opener
-
Como boost Champions League bid, Juve back to winning ways
-
As Iran conflict spills over, Iraq's Kurds say 'this war is not mine'
-
Protests across globe mark one week of Iran war
-
US starts using UK bases for 'defensive' Iran operations
-
Chelsea deny 10-man Wrexham Hollywood finish in FA Cup thriller
-
Netanyahu vows to carry on war, 'eradicate Iranian regime'
As media declines, gory Kirk video spreads on 'unrestrained' social sites
Traditional news outlets were cautious not to broadcast the moment Charlie Kirk was assassinated, but it mattered little in the age of declining media influence.
Within minutes, millions of people -- including children -- watched the graphic footage auto-play across social media platforms.
The amplification of the video showing the American conservative activist's final moments at a university in Utah underscores how major tech firms are falling short in enforcing content moderation amid rising political violence and deepening polarization in the United States.
Most newspapers and television networks -- longtime gatekeepers with editorial guidelines to shield audiences from graphic content -- chose not to show the moment Charlie Kirk was shot dead. Instead, many outlets focused on the calm leading up to the attack and the chaos that followed.
That discretion was largely absent on social media, a fragmented digital landscape shaped by smartphones and instant uploads where graphic footage showing Kirk's body recoiling and blood pouring from a wound spread rapidly.
The footage, which mostly lacked content warnings, was instantly accessible online and often auto-played before viewers had a chance to consent or look away.
"Journalists draw lines for a reason. We know how trauma seeps in through a screen. We know that immediacy without context is its own kind of harm," said Ren LaForme, from the nonprofit media institute Poynter.
"Social media has no such restraint. It promises unfiltered access, but without guarantees of truth and without protection from harm. The cork is off the bottle, and everything spills out: real or fabricated, searing or false."
- 'Shocked and dismayed' -
The graphic visuals also flooded children's devices and social media feeds, sparking anxiety among parents and prompting bipartisan calls from lawmakers for tech companies to take swift action.
"Last week, countless children witnessed the assassination on the portable devices they carry everywhere, in addition to a murder on public transportation, reports of mass shootings and school gun violence," Titania Jordan, from the parental controls app Bark, told AFP.
"Childhood was never meant to include graphic violence or murder. Parents are rightly shocked and dismayed," she said, while advising families to log off social media and make room for "real-time conversations as kids process what they've seen."
The virality of Kirk's video -- alongside the amplification of extreme posts glorifying his death –- comes as many platforms scale back content moderation and, in some cases, eliminate human fact-checkers and moderators even as their algorithms reward engagement.
"The way algorithms have flooded our timelines with posts celebrating Charlie Kirk's horrifying assassination is a damning indictment of the way social media works," Imran Ahmed, chief executive of the watchdog Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), told AFP.
"It lays bare how platforms are designed to reward extreme emotion over empathy or integrity."
- 'Whims of algorithms' -
Posts on Elon Musk's platform X that celebrated Kirk's assassination racked up 52 million views, according to CCDH's research -- evidence that "policy enforcement is not just broken but has been abandoned," Ahmed said.
The posts violated X's guidelines, which allow users to post graphic imagery only "if it is properly labeled" and forbids material explicity "glorifying or expressing desire for violence."
The trend comes as surveys show that traditional media is battling record low public trust, and a growing number of Americans, especially young adults, get their news from platforms such as TikTok.
"At a time when more Americans are tuning out credible news for social media, it's worth remembering that they're leaving behind not just reporting, but the discipline of restraint," said LaForme.
"Journalistic restraint still matters. Someone has to decide what should be witnessed and what scars can be spared."
Peter Adams, senior vice president of research and design at the News Literacy Project, said the widespread exposure to Kirk's assassination video -- which could cause vicarious trauma -- offers an opportunity for people to reassess their relationship with social media.
"These platforms are hyper-addicting because they are personalized, giving everyone little tailor-made hits of dopamine," Adams told AFP.
"We all have a responsibility to ourselves not to hand our consciousness over to the whims of algorithms designed to keep us scrolling, regardless of what it might cost us."
M.Schneider--VB