That's what I was referring to in #30. The higher is the harm they do to real people who are not sitting behind a keyboard scrolling through Facebook. Shooting them or blowing them up, for example.
So, you regard radicalisation, acheived through social media and other such feeds as of less importance or seriousness than being shot at/blown up,etc. Surely, they are eqwually serious, just in different spheres of reality?
Hm, because that's a fair comparison with ISIS, isn't it?
Yup; they were posts and comments by terrorist groups and other comparable groups. One site I used to belong to was hacked and we were 'treated' to anti-capitalist rhetoric and threats to the safety of the countries that the hackers believed we lived in (it turned out to be some ultra-radical US-based anti-capitalist organisation that I'd never heard of, but one or two of the Americans on the site had).
I have also see posts on Facebook that I've been told, by those in the know, are from Indian extremist left-wing groupings - generally claiming to be more Maoist in nature than anything else - who have been threatening the lives of people of both religious and non-religious persuasion. It's what comes of having a number of my Facebook friends based in the sub-continent.