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Elections in 2024: Disinformation will be a “significant” threat this year, EU warns

2024-01-23T19:46:55.308Z

Highlights: Elections in 2024: Disinformation will be a “significant” threat this year, EU warns. Russia has been developing for years “a vast infrastructure intended to lie, manipulate and destabilize on an industrial scale,” warned Josep Borrell. Russia but also China are the main responsible for this “lie factory”, he said. Protecting yourself from disinformation before an election must be prepared “months in advance” and it is important to extend and adapt these measures after the election.


For the EU High Representative on Foreign Affairs, disinformation is a threat to the security of democracies in 2024.


An important year in terms of elections.

And in terms of information.

The year 2024, which will see almost half of the planet affected by elections, is a “crucial year” in the fight against fake news, said Tuesday the head of European diplomacy Josep Borrell.

We are discussing today one of the most significant threats of our time and how to ensure our collective responses to foreign information manipulation and interference.#FIMI



↓https://t.co/5RHvif4tig

— Josep Borrell Fontelles (@JosepBorrellF) January 23, 2024

Disinformation is “one of the most significant threats” that democracies must face, Josep Borrell told the press, presenting the second report on this subject established by his services.

Russia has been developing for years “a vast infrastructure intended to lie, manipulate and destabilize on an industrial scale,” warned Josep Borrell.

This is a “threat against the security” of democracies, which calls for a “fight against an industry that manufactures lies”, he warned.

Risks of fake videos

Some 945 million Indians are called to the polls in May for general elections in this country which last year became the most populous in the world ahead of China.

More than 400 million voters from 27 European countries are called upon to nominate 720 MEPs in early June, during a giant transnational vote.

Disinformation is certainly not new, but its means and capabilities have been increased tenfold by social networks and the emergence of artificial intelligence (AI), even if the use of the latter is still limited, according to this report.

The latter, however, notes a few examples, including that of a video created from scratch by AI showing Moldovan President Maia Sandu as if she were speaking from an official channel of her government, or that of a retouched video calling the Ukrainians to a coup d'état.

This second report, drawn up by the European External Action Service (EEAS), studied a total of 750 cases of disinformation around the world between November 2022 and December last year.

Russia and China singled out

Months before elections in Poland last year, Belarusian official media, for example, launched several news channels on social media targeting Polish voters, with fake videos attacking candidates.

Russia but also China are the main responsible for this “lie factory”, according to Josep Borrell, with Ukraine becoming the main target at a time when Moscow is seeking to justify the invasion of this country by its army, since the outbreak of its “special operation” on February 22, 2024.

Politicians or public figures are targeted, but also celebrities such as stars Margot Robbie or Nicolas Cage, whose images have been used to reach the widest possible audience.

“Ignore, contain, minimize and redirect”

Faced with this type of attack, the report recommends a set of measures to better combat the phenomenon.

Protecting yourself from disinformation before an election must be prepared “months in advance”, and it is important to extend and adapt these measures after the election, he recommends.

Four types of response are possible: “ignore, contain, minimize and redirect”.

Read alsoFight against fake news: “We must strengthen media education”

During the electoral campaign, actors engaged in the fight against disinformation must be able to “precisely differentiate between ignoring or responding to threats”.

Because, sometimes, taking measures can result in giving importance to the fake news that we seek to combat, affirm the authors of this report.

If it is necessary to act and contain this threat, the report suggests informing the platforms conveying “fake news” as soon as possible, by asking them, for example, to ensure closer monitoring of any content relating to the election in question.

Sanctions should also be possible in the event of laxity on the part of certain social networks or platforms, this report further indicates.

“Dangerous content spreads like a cancer that endangers the health of our democracy,” said Josep Borrell.

“But we have the tools to effectively fight this disease.

We have the capacity, but we need to do more.”

Source: leparis

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