By Sam Schechner. 

LILLE--France and Germany on Tuesday demanded that U.S. tech companies help them police terrorism on the Internet.

Top law-enforcement officials from the two countries said that they expect U.S. Internet and social networking companies like Twitter Inc., Facebook Inc. and Google Inc. to pre-emptively remove terror content from their services--or they should expect new laws forcing them to do so.

"Just because the vast majority of this content is found on American services doesn't reduce their impact on French people," said Bernard Cazeneuve, France's interior minister, at a cybersecurity conference.

"We won't succeed in our fight against terrorism unless Internet actors start taking responsibility."

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere echoed that call, commentingh at the same conference that he had to personally ask social media companies to remove "terrible" images from the Internet following the Paris attacks.

"We shouldn't have to wait for a minister to intervene before operators remove this content on their own," Mr. de Maizière said, adding: "The less people take responsibility, the more legislators will be forced to take the initiative."

Facebook and Twitter declined to comment. A spokesman for Google didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Franco-German push for greater cooperation from U.S. tech firms comes as governments seek assistance in both obtaining intelligence on alleged terrorists, and limiting the spread of terrorism messages on social networks.

Representatives from technology companies met last year with EU ministers in Luxembourg and U.K. officials in London. France plans to propose a new surveillance law to allow greater leeway in demanding data on targets from U.S. firms, after already enacting two others in the last year--including one that gives the government the ability to block websites with terrorist content.

France says the menace of online calls for terrorism--used both to intimidate and recruit--have grown significantly. Mr. Cazeneuve said Tuesday that a French Internet-monitoring system dubbed "Pharos" flagged more than 25,000 pieces of illicit content expressing support for terrorism following this month's attacks.

"It's a major issue," Mr. Cazeneuve said.

The push has unnerved both civil liberties advocates and tech firms, particularly after this month's bloody attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo became a rallying point to support freedom of expression.

"Recent legislative additions--some not yet in effect--give France one of the biggest legal arsenals in the world" said ASIC, an association of tech firms that operate in France, including Facebook Inc. and Google Inc. "Any new law or measure should respect all freedoms, both public and personal."

"The government answers an attack on civil rights with another restriction of freedom of expression and the rule of law," free-speech group La Quadrature du Net said in a statement last week. "What a bad tribute to pay to those who gave their lives for freedom of speech."

Some French magistrates involved in antiterrorism investigations also say rushing to close down websites with terrorism content could be counterproductive, because tracking down people who connect to those sites can help authorities home in on suspects.

French authorities say the measures they are taking respect personal rights-but that freedom must be balanced with security and responsibility.

"If we fight terrorism by giving ourselves tools and powers that restrict public liberty, we give the first victory to terrorists," Mr. Cazeneuve said.

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