Mexico: Death by Social Media

28 Sep 2011

The recent torture and murder of two Mexican bloggers after anonymous posts on anti-crime blogs has shocked the country’s internet community. But even more worrisome is how little elected leaders understand the importance of social media, in a country where criminals and citizens alike rely on it as an essential platform for communication.

Two swinging bodies hanging from a bridge greeted commuters in Mexico’s northern city of Nuevo Laredo in mid-September. The sight, sadly, was normal; the reason behind their torture and murder, however, was not. The killers - who, in the message they left, warned that “this is what will happen to all internet busy bodies” - allegedly kidnapped and murdered the couple for comments they had posted on a popular blog focused on organized crime in Mexico. Their death will not stop anonymous readers from commenting on blog posts, but it has taken Mexico’s online community by surprise - and into uncharted territory.

In an age where internet penetration figures have never been higher and privatized telecommunication networks allow an unprecedented number of individuals to mobilize online, social media has exploded across the world; Latin America is no exception. In Mexico, the influence of criminal organizations over traditional media networks has arguably accelerated the use of social media to report on violence in that country.

Crowd-sourcing information

Twitter hashmarks such as #mexicorojo have become a gateway to a torrent of information reported by people on the ground all over the country. Blogs such as ‘Blog del Narco,’ ‘Borderland Beat,’ ‘Juarez en la Sombra’ and others aggregate information, photos, and videos – some of them so macabre that they could have been posted by the murderers themselves. The most popular and controversial blog, external pageBlog del Narco, claims to have external pagebeen started because “the media and government in Mexico try to pretend that nothing is happening, because the media is intimidated and the government has apparently been bought.”

Elsewhere, crowd-sourced crime maps have surfaced, where users log in and report crimes in their neighborhood. The Mexican daily, El Universal, maintains a crowd-sourced external pagecrime map for Mexico City. A separate project has initiated a mapping system for several cities around Mexico, focusing on key variables, such as the location of criminal lookouts in their city, retail drug sales points, or where remains have been found. There is also a downloadable application for mobile devices which is used to report on corruption in Mexico City: It allows drivers to report where and when a traffic officer extorted money for a bogus traffic violation.

This shocking event has opened the door to a wide spectrum of new fears for consumers and suppliers of online media in Mexico: The rest of the message found in mid-September with the dead social media users read, “You better [expletive] pay attention. I’m about to get you.”

With apparent proof that even individuals who post anonymously can be targeted with deadly reprisals, earlier concerns that criminal organizations are external pageforcibly recruiting hackers, now weigh all the more heavily.

The dark side of social media

Even before this latest attack on Mexico’s online community, users were under threat from criminals who used platforms such as Facebook to identify potential targets for kidnapping or, more simply, virtual extortion – a tactic of tricking parents into thinking that their children have been kidnapped. To fool parents, criminals trawl social media sites like MySpace and Facebook for unsecured pages that contain private, sensitive information.

Though most internautas, as Internet surfers are called in Mexico, will be undeterred, Mexico’s criminal organizations have reached an unprecedented level of online sophistication, hunting for victims and targeting specific users who post the wrong information at the wrong time. Forced to find new ways to spread fear, communicate with rest of the world, and control their public image, criminal organizations are increasingly making use of social media tactics.

As media consumers in Mexico have seen, criminal groups such as Los Zetas and the Sinaloa Federation have made deft use of social media to send messages to their rivals, publicize their presence in a new piece of territory, or, simply, to terrorize.

Perhaps the most disturbing part of this whole trend is the external pagerecent arrestof two individuals – one a math teacher – who had tweeted information the Mexican government deemed to be sabotage and ‘of a terrorist nature.’ In an apparently innocent attempt to alert parents and nearby residents, the two allegedly posted that local schools in Veracruz were under attack. Though the two Twitter users have been released, the Mexican government’s knee-jerk reaction speaks volumes about how little elected leaders understand the importance of social media in a country where criminals and citizens alike rely on it as an essential platform for communication.

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