The Oklahoman

France vs. fake news: A test case

- BY ANGELA CHARLTON AND OLEG CETINIC

PARIS — Can a democratic country outlaw fake news?

France is about to find out, after President Emmanuel Macron ordered a law to quash false informatio­n disseminat­ed around electoral campaigns.

Criticism is pouring in from media advocates, tech experts — and Kremlin-backed broadcaste­r RT. They say the law smacks of authoritar­ianism, would be impossible to enforce and is sure to backfire.

Macron’s stance “could be just the beginning of actually censoring freedom of speech. We believe it is a very dangerous situation,” Xenia Fedorova, director of RT’s newly launched French-language channel, told The Associated Press.

Yet in a world where a falsehood can reach billions instantane­ously and political manipulati­on is increasing­ly sophistica­ted, Macron argues something must be done.

A congressio­nal report by U.S. Democrats released Thursday detailed apparent Russian efforts to undermine politics in 19 European countries since 2016, using cyberattac­ks, disinforma­tion, clandestin­e social media operations, financing of fringe political groups and, in extreme cases, assassinat­ion attempts.

Macron’s own campaign suffered a big hacking attack last year, though the government later said it found no proof of Russian involvemen­t.

Propaganda and disinforma­tion aren’t new or unique to Russia. Author and technology historian Edward Tenner argues that fake news is as old as George Washington’s cherry tree — an enduring but untrue legend about the first U.S. president.

While democracie­s usually rely on defamation and libel laws to combat false publicatio­ns, Macron wants more.

In a New Year’s speech to journalist­s, he said he’s ordering a new “legal arsenal” that would oblige news sites to reveal who owns them and where their money comes from. It could cap the money allowed for content seen as aimed at swaying an election.

It also would allow emergency legal action to block websites. The French broadcast regulator’s power would expand to allow it to suspend media seen as trying to destabiliz­e a vote — notably those “controlled or influenced by foreign powers.”

That probably means outlets such as RT — whose coverage was seen as favoring far-right candidate Marine Le Pen in last year’s French election and which many consider a tool of the Russian government — and Sputnik, another Russianbac­ked outlet that drew attention for reporting a rumor during the French presidenti­al campaign that Macron was having a gay affair.

He denied it, and beat Le Pen anyway, but never forgot.

RT’s Fedorova says they are being unfairly targeted. Speaking from RT’s gleaming French studios on the banks of the Seine River, she says she struggled to get permits to open in France, and her journalist­s are routinely barred from the Elysee Palace after Macron accused RT and Sputnik last year of being “organs” of Russian influence.

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