Chicago Sun-Times

It’s risky to curtail ‘disinforma­tion’ when there’s no clear definition of it

- JACOB SULLUM @jacobsullu­m Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine.

NewsGuard, a service that rates adherence to basic principles of good journalism, gives my employer, Reason magazine, its highest possible score. Yet the Global Disinforma­tion Index, a British organizati­on that aims to steer advertiser­s away from disreputab­le websites, claims Reason is one of the 10 “riskiest” online news sources in the United States.

The stark contrast between those two assessment­s illustrate­s the challenge of defining “disinforma­tion,” an increasing­ly nebulous concept that invites subjective judgments driven by political allegiance­s and policy preference­s. That problem is especially acute when the government demands that websites take steps to curtail “disinforma­tion,” portraying it as a grave threat to public health, democracy and national security.

The GDI, which receives financial support from the National Endowment for Democracy, purports to offer “neutral” estimates of the likelihood that a website will promote disinforma­tion. Counterint­uitively, its “risk” ratings do not require any actual examples of inaccurate reporting, let alone deliberate misreprese­ntations.

The GDI ratings are instead based on 16 “indicators” under two “pillars”: “content” and “operations.” The organizati­on says Reason’s “high” risk rating was due to a lack of explicitly stated policies regarding “authorship attributio­n,” fact-checking, correction­s and moderation of reader comments.

The GDI emphasizes its “content” judgments are based on a sample of articles that reviewers analyze without knowing the source or author, which it says helps “maintain nuance and neutrality.” But several of the “indicators” require judgments that are bound to be influenced by the reviewers’ personal opinions.

In assessing “article bias,” for example, reviewers are supposed to consider whether the writer uses “faulty logic” or “unfairly engages with different views on the story.” Reviewers also look for “negative targeting” of “individual­s or institutio­ns,” which is supposedly distinct from “criticism” based on “solid reasoning” and “strong evidence.”

The GDI says its ratings do not hinge on whether reviewers agree with the opinions that writers express. But it begs belief to suppose that people who read articles that contradict their own views won’t be especially inclined to perceive “faulty logic,” insufficie­nt attention to other perspectiv­es, weak reasoning and inadequate evidence.

It is therefore not surprising that all 10 of the “riskiest” sources identified by the GDI are conservati­ve or libertaria­n, while nearly all of the “lowest risk” sites, which include NPR, The New York Times, HuffPost and BuzzFeed News, lean left. Although the GDI insists “the index does not assess partisansh­ip or the specific political, religious or ideologica­l orientatio­n of the site,” it explicitly considers “the degree to which the site is likely to adhere to an ideologica­l affiliatio­n.”

The GDI combines dubious methods with a dodgy definition of “disinforma­tion.” You might think that disinforma­tion, as distinct from misinforma­tion, requires an intent to deceive. But the organizati­on disavows that requiremen­t because it “cannot be directly measured.”

The GDI’s definition of disinforma­tion neverthele­ss describes it as “intentiona­lly misleading.” The organizati­on contradict­s itself again when it says “all newsrooms are vulnerable to disinforma­tion risks, ranging from everyday human error to more nefarious tactics” (emphasis added).

You might also think disinforma­tion, at the very least, must be false. The GDI thinks that criterion is also too demanding because it is “extremely difficult to assess at scale” and because “a statement that is technicall­y true can be presented out of context in a misleading and harmful way.”

In short, the folks at the GDI know disinforma­tion when they see it, although they do not claim that “high risk” websites actually promote it — only that they might. That attitude reflects a broader problem: Everyone agrees that disinforma­tion is bad, but people disagree about what the category includes.

Given this confusion, the federal government’s efforts to squelch “disinforma­tion,” which include pressure on social media platforms and subsidies for groups like the GDI, are especially chilling. Even “intentiona­lly misleading” speech is protected by the First Amendment, and a government that respects freedom of speech has no business deciding how to apply that slippery label.

 ?? TONY KARUMBA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? In this file photo, taken April 2020, a man browses through his social media.
TONY KARUMBA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES In this file photo, taken April 2020, a man browses through his social media.
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