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Date: 2025
Abstract: The proliferation of antisemitic content on small, high harm online services poses a significant risk to users of user-to-user safety. This includes risks of radicalisation into extremist and violent ideologies, and with serious implications for online threats, abuse and harassment. These risks are exacerbated when users are from a group with protected characteristics, which include age, race, sex and sexual orientation. In relation to antisemitism, content on these small services tends to be more extreme than the anti-Jewish racism on large, mainstream platforms. As a result, it helps radicalise people into extreme narratives, the results of which have included violence against Jews. The proliferation of antisemitism online also contributes to the rising levels of racism that divide communities. It eases the spread and amplification of conspiracy theories that undermine trust in democratic institutions and erode liberal values of tolerance and inclusion, across Europe. It also helps normalise antisemitism in both online and offline discourse. These small platforms, including, for example, BitChute, Gab, and 4chan, often operate with minimal moderation and are also sometimes encrypted, providing safe havens for extremist content that includes antisemitic tropes, incitement to violence, and radicalising material. Despite the harm they cause, many of these platforms manage to escape robust regulation in Britain and the EU. This is particularly worrying, considering the major increase in antisemitism in Europe. In Britain, the Community Security Trust (CST) recorded 3,528 antisemitic incidents for 2024. This is roughly double the number of incidents recorded in 2022, and slightly less than the number recorded in 2023–when there was a sharp rise following the 7 October Hamas attack on Southern Israel. In the EU, some organisations across Europe reported an increase of more than 400% in antisemitic incidents following 7 October 2023. A 2024 survey found that 96% of respondents from 13 EU countries have encountered antisemitism in their daily life. Hate crimes tend to be severely under-reported, so these numbers–although high– still represent only a portion of the real occurrence of antisemitic hate crimes. In this report, we examine the antisemitic content that originates from these small services, and how it migrates to larger platforms, where it spreads at a greater rate and has a wider, even worldwide, reach. This report will begin with an overview of antisemitism on small services and the synergy with larger services, to explain the risks. We will then look at services to demonstrate the origins of antisemitic content on these platforms. The report ends with recommendations for policy and regulation, to tackle the harm caused by small services, urging decision-makers and regulators to apply stronger enforcement and risk-based platform categorisation to protect Jewish communities and our democracies.