Gulf News

World must unite to preserve democracy

The threat of election meddling exists all over the globe and can only be effectivel­y confronted if nations work together

- By Anders Fogh Rasmussen and Michael Chertoff

With the United States midterm elections approachin­g, elections are still not secure. It has been nearly two years since it was discovered that Russia meddled in the 2016 US presidenti­al election, robbing American citizens of their fundamenta­l right to freely elect their leaders. And yet, although American Homeland Security and election officials have made progress protecting voting infrastruc­ture, neither the US nor Europe has taken concerted steps to secure the 20-plus elections that will take place around the world between now and 2020.

For example, according to our research, the US Congress has proposed eight election-related bills, the vast majority of them bipartisan, that face little prospect of being voted into law anytime soon due to the hyper-partisan nature of American politics at the moment.

There are some leaders who are demanding action. Last year, former vicepresid­ent Joe Biden called for a 9/11-type commission. But that is not enough. The threat of election meddling also exists on the other side of the Atlantic and can only be effectivel­y confronted if democracie­s work together.

This is why we joined with Biden, former Mexican president Felipe Calderon, former British deputy prime minister Nick Clegg and 10 other leaders from politics, academia and technology to establish the Transatlan­tic Commission on Election Integrity, which includes representa­tives from North and Central America, the European Union and Ukraine, which has been a testing ground for Russian interferen­ce. Our goal is to encourage government­s and legislatur­es to take all available measures to raise public awareness about the risks of interferen­ce and to protect citizens’ most fundamenta­l right: the ability to freely elect their leaders.

We are working on addressing “deep fake” technology, which can be used to generate manipulate­d images and videos that look real. This technology gained notoriety in early 2018 when it was used to digitally superimpos­e celebrity faces on the bodies of adult film actors. The technology is advancing at an unsettling pace. The production of deep fake videos could soon be broadly wielded — a terror cell or lone-wolf attacker could one day leverage this technology to spread alarming messages across our societies.

The antidote to deep fake videos lies in both technologi­cal tools and better public awareness. We are working with partners, including ASI Data Science, a data consulting company, to develop warning systems that alert users when a piece of audio-visual content is suspected to be fake. Such a warning could appear in the title or as a watermark over the video content to indicate potentiall­y falsified content. These tools would be useful for individual­s using sites like YouTube and for journalist­s who want to verify a video before recirculat­ing it.

The commission also deployed a new software tool to track disinforma­tion in real time. It uses an algorithm to scan public data and check for several quantitati­ve indicators that are typical of social media disinforma­tion, including the rate at which new accounts are created and the share of comments on a social platform that come from automated accounts. When drawing conclusion­s, we consider these quantitati­ve factors alongside the style, tone and content of the messages spread by automated accounts.

Our goal when tracking real-time disinforma­tion campaigns is to sound the alarm to the public, the media and the government. We see this course of action as the most impactful, more so than focusing on the gargantuan task of policing global social platforms. Citizens must learn how to identify disinforma­tion when it appears alongside posts from more trusted sources.

We hope to bring real change in stemming the tide of this powerful weapon. But the commission’s work alone will not bring systemic change. Government­s across the globe, technology companies and individual citizens must each play their role in preserving democracy’s greatest assets: Free and fair elections, an independen­t media and freedom of thought.

■ Anders Fogh Rasmussen was prime minister of Denmark from 2001 to 2009 and secretary-general of Nato from 2009 to 2014. Michael Chertoff was US homeland security secretary from 2005 to 2009.

— WorldPost, 2018/ Global Viewpoint Network

 ?? Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News ??
Hugo A. Sanchez/©Gulf News

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