While many people celebrated gay marriage on France's Twitter, some passed around the hashtag #IlFautTuerlesHomosexuels, meaning "Homosexuals must be killed."

Doesn't a hashtag threatening death against people violate one of Twitter's policies, to say nothing of French law? We emailed Twitter's press people asking this and haven't heard back yet.
The microblogging site is normally extremely hesitant to monitor content, however. The company did not censor any user account in its history until last October, when it blocked a neo-Nazi group from joining.
More from GlobalPost: Why gay marriage polarised France
Shortly after that, Twitter got caught up in another hate speech scandal in France. The hashtags #unbonjuif and #agoodjew were proliferating on Twitter, but the company finally removed them after being threatened with a lawsuit.
"Twitter does not mediate content," the company had said in a statement at the time. "If we are alerted to content that may be in violation of our terms of service, we will investigate each report and respond according to the policies and procedures outlined in our support pages."
The "Homosexuals must be killed" hashtag may also run up against France's strict anti-hate speech laws.
Under the First Amendment, hate speech in the US must be likely to cause violence or harm in order to be deemed "criminal." But in France and other European Union countries, speech can be prohibited if it is only abusive. The Jewish Weekly notes that there are also many laws that attempt to regulate Holocaust denial in Europe.
In one famous example, French designer John Galliano was arrested in 2011 for a Mel Gibson-esque anti-Semitic tirade he went on in a bar. A French court eventually decided to fine him.
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