Disinformation is on the rise. How does it work?

Understanding it will lead to better ways to fight it


  • by
  • 05 1, 2024
  • in Science and technology

In January 2024KMTAIAI, in the run-up to elections in Taiwan, hundreds of video posts appeared on YouTube, Instagram, X and other social platforms entitled “The Secret History of Tsai Ing-wen”. News anchors, speaking English and Chinese, made a series of false claims about Ms Tsai, the outgoing president, and her ruling party. On election day itself, January 13th, an audio clip began to circulate in which Terry Gou, a candidate who had dropped out of the race in November, seemed to endorse the candidate of the China-friendly party (in fact, Mr Gou made no endorsement).Both the video clips and audio were probably created using artificial intelligence () and posted by a Chinese state-backed propaganda group known variously as Spamouflage, Dragonbridge and Storm-1376. In a report released on April 5th, the Threat Intelligence team at Microsoft, a tech firm, said this was the first time it had seen a nation-state use -generated material to sway a foreign election.

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