China Daily Global Weekly

Warfare by other means

Pandemic, Ukraine conflict bring to fore the growing menace of fake news, disinforma­tion

- By ZHANG CHUNYU and GUO KE Zhang Chunyu is an assistant professor at the School of Journalism and Communicat­ion, Shanghai Internatio­nal Studies University; Guo Ke is the dean and professor at the same school. The views do not necessaril­y represent those o

The developmen­t of informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es, including mobile networks, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce, has not only increased the speed and expanded the scope of informatio­n disseminat­ion, but also accelerate­d the global flow of fake news.

According to the American News Pathways Project survey released by the Pew Research Center in 2020, the disseminat­ion of fake news is common, but its effects depend on the specific communicat­ion channels and the audience’s response.

For example, Americans who mainly rely on social media for informatio­n are more likely to be exposed to different types of fake news threads than people who prefer to get informatio­n from traditiona­l media outlets.

Joseph Zompetti, a professor at Illinois State University, found that social media and its algorithmi­c mechanisms, too, accelerate­d the spread of fake news globally. As such, improving digital literacy and the informatio­n identifica­tion skills of netizens and regulating social media platforms holds key to checking the spread of fake news.

The use of disinforma­tion as a political weapon has intensifie­d since the pandemic broke out. For example, a Cornell University research team analyzed 38 million English-language reports on the pandemic in 2020 and found former US president Donald Trump to be the single largest driver of the “informatio­n epidemic”.

The Pew Research Center survey also showed that people who have long read or watched pandemic informatio­n issued by the Trump administra­tion are more likely to believe in fake news and political conspiracy theories about the pandemic. In fact, this has led to a surge in violence against Asian Americans.

Besides, fake news and political conspiracy theories about the outbreak in China have exacerbate­d the global public’s negative perception of China.

As for the discussion on fake news in the media industry and academia, it has changed from misinforma­tion (fake news) related to the pandemic to disinforma­tion (misleading news), with the former referring to false news in a broader sense and the latter to intentiona­l disseminat­ion of false or misleading informatio­n to earn profit, cause harm, or promote a certain ideology.

Academic research on disinforma­tion started in earnest after 2016. Before that, the Western media used the term “propaganda” to define political communicat­ion in the noncapital­ist countries, and termed Western propaganda as “rhetoric”. For instance, former US president George W. Bush used the “war on terror” rhetoric in an attempt to persuade the world to accord legitimacy to his military operations in the Middle

East after the Sept 11, 2001, attacks.

Moreover, the Ukraine-Russia conflict has once again drawn the internatio­nal community into an “informatio­n war” full of fake news. The Western media and elites, who more or less control the communicat­ion channels and global discourse, say informatio­n released by Russia is “misleading news”, and claim their own communicat­ion campaigns are aimed at safeguardi­ng “democracy, justice, peace, and freedom of the press”.

Western countries have also used their control over ICTs and global media networks to ban Russian media outlets, thus preventing the internatio­nal community from knowing the other side of the story in the Ukraine-Russia conflict.

When Moscow announced on March 5 that strict action, including imprisonme­nt of up to 15 years, will be taken against media outlets spreading “fake news”, especially those discrediti­ng the Russian armed forces and calling for sanctions against Russia, Bloomberg, The New York Times, and other Western media outlets suspended their operations in Russia. This has restricted the global flow of news and communicat­ion, and further intensifie­d the confrontat­ion between Russia and the West.

It is clear that instead of seriously trying to help end the conflict, the Western powers have been imposing harsher sanctions on Moscow in order to debilitate its financial, foreign trade and other sectors.

Fake news is rampant worldwide. And the latest series of conflicts have exposed how cruel the fact is that some forces manipulate fake news in the informatio­n war.

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