A Chicago woman has filed a lawsuit against Google, Twitter, and Facebook for “aiding, abetting, and knowingly providing support and resources to [terror group] Isis”.

Mandy Palmucci of Chicago, Illinois, said she is suffering from trauma after being involved in the November 2015 Paris attacks for which Isis claimed credit.

According to the Chicago Sun-Times, her 128-page complaint filed in a US federal court, she is seeking damages for her "emotional distress".

She was visiting Paris and sitting with friends in La Belle Equipe cafe where 19 people were gunned down in one of three attack sites that day. At the Bataclan theatre alone, 89 people perished. In total, more than 400 people were injured.

Ms Palmucci recounted the incident in the complaint and, according to her lawyer Keith Altman, has been suffering “nightmares” as a result of the attack.

“Defendants knowingly provided material support and resources to Isis in the form of Twitter, Facebook, and Google’s YouTube platforms and other services, as well as by making personnel available to Isis,” the complaint stated.

The complaint also alleged that the companies have given Isis "a sense of authenticity and legitimacy" and fostered a method for fundraising.

Mr Altman told The Independent that without the social media giants “these terrorist organisations would be 50 guys standing around a fire in the middle of the desert...chanting” and Ms Palmucci hopes the companies will change their practices in light of the lawsuit.

The complaint also cited the Anti-terrorism Act (ATA) and the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act (Jasta).

Both essentially allow any US citizen injured in an act of terrorism to bring a lawsuit in a US court to seek damages for their injuries.

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But money is “not the motivating factor,” Mr Altman told The Independent.

He said the real purpose of the lawsuit is “no more funerals.”

“No one should lose a loved one to terrorist attacks...nobody should provide support for terrorists and not be held accountable,” Mr Altman said.

The companies had been previously accused by the Home Office in the UK for similar actions - "grooming" and "radicalisation" of people through their algorithms.

“Whether that is racist extremism or Islamist extremism, your technology is doing that job and you’re not stopping it from doing so," the Home Affairs Committee said in December 2017.

Mr Altman’s reasoning for going after Google, Twitter, and Facebook is that they are companies large enough to “support a judgement,” meaning they could pay out damages to Ms Palmucci should the case be ruled in her favour.

In the complaint, she also alleged that "Isis accounts on Twitter have grown “at an astonishing rate” and that, as of December 2014, the [terror] group had roughly 70,000 Twitter accounts — 79 officially — posting 90 tweets a minute," the newspaper reported.

Mr Altman wrote that Isis used the platforms, including Google's YouTube, to "transform the operational leaders of the Paris attacks into ‘celebrity’ among jihadi terrorists."

However, the companies are not necessarily the entry point for Isis’ media arm, the Amaq Agency.

In pictures: Paris attacks Show all 25 1 /25 In pictures: Paris attacks In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks French police with protective shields walk in line near the Bataclan concert hall Reuters In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Rescuers evacuate an injured person on Boulevard des Filles du Calvaire AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks French Vigipirate troops mobilize next to Place de la Bastille AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks French soldiers mobilize near to the Place de la Bastille AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Wounded people are evacuated outside the scene of a hostage situation at the Bataclan theatre EPA In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks People react as they gather to watch the scene near the Bataclan concert hall Reuters In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks French police secure the area outside a cafe near the Bataclan concert hall Reuters In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Rescuers workers evacuate victims near the Bataclan concert hall AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks French Prime Minister Manuel Valls and French President Francois Hollande attending an emergency meeting at the Interior Ministry AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Spectators invade the pitch of the Stade de France after explosions were heard outside AP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks A man lies on the ground as French police check his identity near the Bataclan concert hall Reuters In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Police officers man a position close to the Bataclan theatre AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Wounded people are evacuated from the Stade de France in Paris EPA In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Two men evacuate the Place de la Republique square in Paris as a police officer looks on AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Football fans are evacuated from the Stade de France stadium In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks An armed police officer Dan Gabriel In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks The Stade de France is evacuated after reports of an explosion In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks A member of the French fire brigade aids an injured individual near the Bataclan concert hall In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Wounded people are evacuated from the Stade de France in Paris In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Police are seen outside a cafe in 10th arrondissement of the French capital Paris, In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Rescuers assist an injured man on Boulevard des Filles du Calvaire, close to the Bataclan concert hall AFP In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks The scene at a restaurant in 10th arrondissement In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks The Bataclan theatre - where around 100 people are thought be held hostage In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks The Stade de France as it was evacuated In pictures: Paris attacks Paris attacks Forensic experts inspect the site of an attack outside the Stade de France stadium in Saint-Denis AFP

The Telegram messaging platform is what is used more extensively - Isis’ “app of choice,” as Vox reported.

It was Telegram that was used to spread propaganda ahead of the Paris attacks on the Belle Equipe cafe where Ms Palmucci and her friends were visiting and the Bataclan concert venue.

The terror group also used the app to recruit attackers for the 2016 Christmas market attack in Berlin and the 2017 New Year’s attack on the Reina nightclub in Istanbul, Turkey.

Telegram’s founder, Pavel Durov, is a Russian national and provided information to the government after Russia threatened to shut the company down after saying it had information the app was used by Isis.

The company is also registered in the US as a limited liability corporation and its app is listed in the iTunes app store for download.

Mr Altman, however, said a suit was not being brought on the company because it is not a US entity. He also said he was “not sure [of] Telegram’s financial status;” that it may not be able to “support a judgement” and the financial damages Ms Palmucci is seeking.

Similar lawsuits elsewhere have been dismissed on grounds that laws shield online providers from responsibility for content posted by users.

Mr Altman said though, he believed multiple federal courts should look into the issue based on ATA.

He noted that a case in the same regional federal court in which Ms Palmucci has filed heard a case that ruled even assisting a “humanitarian arm of a terrorist organisation” was breaking the law.

Ms Palmucci and her legal team hope that case will serve as a precedent for hers.