Information manipulation and Eastern European topics

Democracy is under threat worldwide due to waning information integrity, but civil society can counter media manipulation without violating fundamental freedoms.
The setbacks to global democracy over the past decade, identified by Freedom House’s annual Freedom in the World report, can be attributed in part to the fact that electorates are increasingly being misinformed by politically captured media or poor journalism. At the same time, the emerging threat of technology-driven disinformation is causing some societies to overcompensate by adopting legislation that contradicts press freedom principles.
The challenge of the next decade will be to address media manipulation and disinformation without sacrificing freedom of expression. Moldova provides clear examples of this tradeoff, and the necessary solutions for that country—investment in media literacy and an independent press council—could also be applied worldwide. These two measures can be effective in counteracting threats to information integrity regardless of the source and without eroding the protections that define democracy.
Read more at Freedom House

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Disinformation on the Web: Impact, Characteristics, and Detection of Wikipedia Hoaxes

Fake news on Wikipedia