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Online jihadist content attracts more clicks in Britain than any other country in Europe, a major new report warns.

Analysts found the Islamic State terror group (IS) was still pumping out vast volumes of internet propaganda despite coming under intense military pressure in Iraq and Syria.

Experts say the group produces around 100 pieces of new content in an average week - but this is a conservative estimate.

The in-depth study by think tank Policy Exchange says tens of thousands of users access jihadist material online from all over the globe.

Researchers found the UK was the fifth most frequent location from which content was accessed - after Turkey, the US, Saudi Arabia and Iraq - and registered the largest number of clicks in Europe.

Concerns over the availability of terrorist material such as execution videos and bomb-making instructions on the internet have intensified after Britain was targeted by its fifth terror attack of the year.

In a forward for the paper, former US military chief General David Petraeus highlighted last week's events at Parsons Green.

He said: "The attempted bombing of an underground train in London last Friday - using a device that can be built from instructions available online - merely underscored once again the ever-present nature of this threat."

Gen Petraeus warned that efforts to combat extremism online to now have been "inadequate".

He wrote: "There is no doubting the urgency of this matter. The status quo clearly is unacceptable."

The 131-page assessment finds that the decline of IS - also known as ISIS or Daesh - in the online space has been "significantly overstated".

It says: "For at least a year, the production of content has continued despite the death of key figures, loss of territory and ongoing fighting."

The report details how:

In an average week IS produces over one hundred new articles, videos and newspapers;

They are disseminated across a "vast ecosystem" of platforms, file sharing services, websites and social media;

IS now uses encrypted messaging service Telegram as the core communication platform for talking to sympathisers;

But jihadists have not abandoned other platforms, with content also regularly accessed via Facebook, Google and Twitter;

Three in four people (74%) want big internet companies to be more proactive in locating and deleting extremist content, according to a poll.

The paper suggests the Government may wish to consider new laws to counter the possession and consumption of extremist material online.

Lead author Dr Martyn Frampton said governments and security services have been playing a "fruitless game of 'whack-a-mole"' which is focused on removing individual pieces of content.

He warned: "The evidence suggests that we are not winning the war against online extremism.

"If the internet companies won't do what their customers want and take more responsibility for removing this content, then government must take action through additional regulation and legislation."

This week Prime Minister Theresa May and French president Emmanuel Macron will hold talks to discuss possible new measures to tackle the problem.

It emerged earlier this year that Britain and France are looking at plans that could see technology firms face fines if their efforts are not up to scratch.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd warned the internet must not be a "safe space" for terrorists and criminals.

She said: "I have made it crystal clear to internet bosses that they need to go further and faster to remove terrorist content from their websites and prevent it being uploaded in the first place."

Facebook, Microsoft, Twitter and YouTube have set up the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism to spearhead efforts to clamp down on extremist content.

Twitter says terrorist content has no place on the platform.

Figures published by the microblogging site show 636,248 accounts were suspended in total between August 2015 and December 2016 for the promotion of terrorism.

Google said violent extremism was a "complex problem", adding: "We are committed to being part of the solution and we are doing more every day to tackle these issues.

"We are making significant progress through machine learning technology, partnerships with experts and collaboration with other companies through the Global Internet Forum - and we know there is more to be done."

Facebook said it is committed to fighting online extremism and works "aggressively" to remove terrorist content as soon as it becomes aware of it.

A spokeswoman added: "We've also built a shared industry database of 'hashes' - unique digital 'fingerprints' - of violent terrorist videos or images, which we're actively expanding and is helping us to act on such content even more quickly."



Reporting by PA