Knowledge Center Blogs
The Foundations of Disinformation and Misinformation
The term Information disorder was coined by researcher Dr. Claire Wardle to describe the broad societal challenges associated with misinformation and disinformation, generally on the digital landscape, that contribute to the pollution of our evolving information ecosystem. Misinformation is the unintentional spread of false or misleading information, shared by mistake, or under a presumption of truth. Disinformation — false or misleading information that is deliberately spread with an intent to cause harm or damage — is neither new nor unique to the modern day.
From Octavian’s propaganda campaign against Antony in Ancient Rome to ‘The Great Moon Hoax’ of 1835, disinformation has been a favored weapon of politicians, civic leaders and mischief makers around the world. Yet the rise of the internet and the exponential growth of social media use across cultures and communities has dramatically increased the speed and impact of false narratives. The tactics behind disinformation vary widely and further complicates our understanding around source motivation and intention. Knowing how it’s done is just as important when trying to understand why.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- danah boyd, partner researcher at Microsoft Research, founder and president of Data & Society Research Institute, @zephoria
- Renee DiResta, technical research manager at Stanford Internet Observatory, @noUpside
- Kolina Koltai, postdoctoral researcher at the Center for an Informed Public at the University of Washington, @KolinaKoltai
- Meghna Mahadevan, disinformation defense strategist with United We Dream
- Thomas Rid, professor of Strategic Studies, Johns Hopkins University, @RidT
- Claire Wardle, co-founder of First Draft, @cward1e
Reading Resources
- Information Disorder: Toward An Interdisciplinary Framework For Research And Policy Making (First Draft)
- A short guide to the history of ’fake news’ and disinformation (International Center for Journalists)
- Video: A Brief History Of Disinformation, And What To Do About It (Matt Tait, University of Texas)
- The Long and Brutal History of Fake News (Jacob Soll, Politico)
- Podcast: Thomas Rid on active measures and digital disinformation (Brookings)
- The Future of Truth and Misinformation Online (Janna Anderson And Lee Rainie, Pew Research Center)
- The Misinformation Campaign Was Distinctly One-Sided (Renee DiResta, The Atlantic)
- The long fuse: Misinformation and the 2020 election (Election Integrity Partnership report)
- 20/20 Vision: Lessons learned about the challenges of disrupting misinformation in 2020 (First Draft article series)
- Combatting Digital Disinformation An Evaluation Of The William And Flora Hewlett Foundation’s Disinformation Strategy (Hewlett)
- Digital Democracy: Accelerating A New Field Of Knowledge (Knight Foundation)
- Facebook: From Election to Insurrection (Avaaz report)
- Tackling misinformation: What researchers could do with social media data (HKS Misinformation Review)
- Addressing false information during the 2020 election and lessons for the future (American Press Institute)
Regulation Models from Other Parts of the World
Efforts by various European countries to address distrust and disinformation vary across the continent. Regulating big technology companies and social media platforms is an approach the U.S. has yet to effectively take, presenting opportunities for the American government to learn, adapt and act.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Victoria De Posson, Disruptive Competition Project
- Evelyn Douek, lecturer at Harvard Law School, @evelyndouek
- Dr. Aleksandra Kuczerawy, Senior Fellow and Researcher at KU Leuven, @AlexandraQu
- Christoph Schmon, International Policy director, Electronic Frontier Foundation, @EFF
Reading Resources
- Social media: How do other governments regulate it? (BBC)
- The United States Needs a BBC (Foreign Policy, 2021)
- How the EU’s new digital services act can help build trust and tackle illegal content (Victoria De Posson, Disruptive Competition Project)
- Digital Services Act: Ensuring a trustworthy and safe online environment while allowing freedom of expression (Victoria De Posson, Disruptive Competition Project)
- Twitter, Trump, and Tough Decisions: EU Freedom of Expression and the Digital Services Act (Christoph Schmon, Electronic Frontier Foundation)
- EU Code of Practice on Disinformation: Briefing Note for the New European Commission (Carnegie Endowment)
- Law prohibiting election misinformation struck down (CBC)
- Southeast Asia’s Disinformation Crisis: Where the State is the Biggest Bad Actor and Regulation is a Bad Word (Jonathan Corpus Ong, Insights from the Social Sciences)
- Government Responses to Disinformation on Social Media Platforms: France (Library of Congress)
- Government Responses to Disinformation on Social Media Platforms (Library of Congress)
First Amendment and Section 230
Section 230 has become a political football in terms of platform accountability and responsibility regarding the spread of online mis and disinformation. “One highly influential piece of misinformation is that the tech industry is biased against conservative figures and conservative content,” shared Dr. Mary Anne Franks, president of the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative as part of a question for Facebook, Twitter and Google CEOs. “Conservative figures and content actually perform very well on social media sites such as Facebook, even though they disproportionately violate companies’ policies against misinformation and other abuse.” With members of Congress introducing the SAFE TECH Act to address Section 230 concerns, questions are being raised about how this could affect rights protected by the First Amendment.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Dr. Mary Anne Franks, President of the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative and Professor of Law at the University of Miami, @ma_franks
- Eric Goldman, internet law professor, Santa Clara University Law School, @ericgoldman
- Jeff Kosseff, assistant professor of cybersecurity law at the United States Naval Academy, author of The Twenty-Six Words That Created the Internet.” @jkosseff
- Mike Masnick, founder and CEO of the Copia Institute, @mmasnick
Reading Resources
- The history of Section 230 (60 Minutes, with Jeff Kosseff)
- Speech on the internet: The First Amendment and Section 230 are different (Marketplace)
- Section 230: Everything You Need to Know — Tweets, Free Speech, Beyond (Mike Masnick, podcast)
- Hello! You’ve Been Referred Here Because You’re Wrong About Section 230 Of The Communications Decency Act (Mike Masnick, Techdirt blog)
- How Section 230 Enhances the First Amendment (Eric Goldman, American Constitution Society)
- Six Constitutional Hurdles For Platform Speech Regulation (Daphne Keller, Center for Internet and Society)
- Mapping Worldwide Initiatives to Counter Influence Operations (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace)
Cognitive Science and Behavioral Economics
Social media may have provided a space for mis and disinformation to spread, but questions around why people believe and share false content and how they became radicalized must be addressed as well. What roles do cognitive biases and mental shortcuts, as described by behavioral economics, and the development of algorithms affect or even degrade our information ecosystem?
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Meredith Broussard, research director at the NYU Alliance for Public Interest Technology, @merbroussard
- Panayiota (Pani) Kendeou, Educational Psychology, co-author of the Debunking Handbook, @Kendeou
- Eric Saund, Research scientist in Cognitive Science and AI (no Twitter)
- Jason Stanley, philosophy, @jasonintrator
Reading Resources
- ‘Exit Counselors’ Strain To Pull Americans Out Of A Web Of False Conspiracies (Tovia Smith, NPR)
- COVID lies, conspiracy theories build on boredom, beliefs (Kathrin Wesolowski, Deutsche Welle)
- Political psychology in the digital (mis)information age: A model of news belief and sharing (Preprint)
- How Cybersecurity Experts Can Nudge Users To Make Safer Choices (Perry Carpenter, Forbes)
- How Facebook got addicted to spreading misinformation (Karen Hao, Tech Review)
- Fake News and Anthropology: A Conversation on Technology, Trust, and Publics in an Age of Mass Disinformation (Journal of the Association for Political and Legal Anthropology)
Platform Response and Accountability
Social media platforms and Big Tech play a pivotal role in both the spread and response to online mis and disinformation. Questions regarding transparency, responsibility and accountability have risen as independent researchers and technologists work to understand how to approach studying platform impact when data and access are restricted. Platform-led efforts, policies and research have been developed internally and with nonprofit organizations, but questions still remain over their effectiveness.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Emily Bell, founder, director, Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University, @Emilybell
- Erin Gallagher, social media researcher, @3r1nG
- Timnit Gebru, computer scientist and co-founder, Black in AI, @timnitGebru
- Ifeoma Ozoma, Founder and Principal of Earthseed, @IfeomaOzoma
- Nicol Turner Lee, Senior Fellow – Governance Studies, Director – Center for Technology Innovation, Brookings, @drturnerlee
Reading Resources
- All Change No Fix: How Big Tech’s “Self regulation” fails our democracy (Decode Democracy)
- A Dozen Experts with Questions Congress Should Ask the Tech CEOs — On Disinformation and Extremism (Just Security)
- Can an Oversight Board Created by Facebook Actually Fix the Company’s Failings? (Mother Jones)
- Distraction Helps Misinformation Spread. Thinking About Accuracy Can Reduce it (Jigsaw)
- Can “Inoculation” Build Broad-Based Resistance to Misinformation? (Jigsaw)
- Why content moderation costs billions and is so tricky for Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and others (CNBC)
- Facebook’s Oversight Board makes an imperfect case for private governance (Brookings)
- You and the Algorithm: It Takes Two to Tango (Nick Clegg, Medium)
- We need to know more about political ads. But can transparency be a trap? (Madelyn Webb, Bethan John, NiemanLab)
- Platform Interventions: How Social Media Counters Influence Operations (Partnership for Countering Influence Operations, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace)
- Bringing Truth to the Internet (Democracy Journal)
- Social Media and Democracy: The State of the Field, Prospects for Reform (Social Science Research Council)
- Improving Social Media: The People, Organizations and Ideas for a Better Tech Future (All Tech is Human)
Intersection of Disinformation and Marginalized Communities
Communities of color and other marginalized groups have consistently been disproportionately affected and targeted by mis and disinformation. According to a report by the Senate Intelligence Committee on Russian interference in 2016, “no single group of Americans was targeted by IRA information operatives more than African Americans. By far, race and related issues were the preferred target of the information warfare campaign designed to divide the country.” In 2020, these tactics focused on suppressing voter turnout and spreading medical distrust in minority communities, creating societal harm and individual risk. Understanding the history of targeted disinformation campaigns is critical when trying to develop whole-of-society solutions.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Nora Benavidez, PEN America, @AttorneyNora
- Farai Chideya, Ford Foundation, @farai
- Brandi-Collins Dexter, Shorenstein Center, @BrandingBrandi
- Claudia Flores-Saviaga, Fellow at Facebook Research, Ph.D. candidate in the HCI Lab at West Virginia University, @saviaga
- Sherrilyn Ifill, President, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, @Sifill_LDF
- Jacquelyn Mason, special projects manager, First Draft, @JacquieSMason
- Shireen Mitchell, founder, Stop Online Violence Against Women, @digitalsista
- Olivier Sylvain, Professor of Law at Fordham University, @oliviersylvain
- Bridget Todd, communications director at UltraViolet, @BridgetMarie
- Khuram Zaman, Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University, @zamandigital
Reading Resources
- Failure to understand Black and Latinx communities will result in a critical misunderstanding of the impact of disinformation (Jacquelyn Mason, First Draft)
- From vote to virus, misinformation campaign targets Latinos (Will Weissert, AP)
- Michael Tubbs on disinformation, racism, and news deserts (Akintunde Ahmad, Columbia Journalism Review)
- COVID-19 infodemic exacerbates existing religious and racial prejudices (Harrison Mantas, Poynter)
- ‘An unquestionable truth’: Religious misinformation in the coronavirus pandemic (Jaime Longoria, Daniel Acosta Ramos and Madelyn Webb, First Draft)
- The challenge of combating fake news in Asian American communities (Terry Nguyen, Vox)
- How a racialized disinformation campaign ties itself to The 1619 Project (Joan Donovan, Brandi-Collins Dexter, Columbia Journalism Review)
Cults, Conspiracy Theories and Thwarting Online Radicalization
Mis- and disinformation has driven individuals to embrace fringe, radical views. Its roots go back decades as a cyclical relationship between public curiosity and the media and entertainment industry have led to the dramatization and amplification of cults and conspiracy theories. The advent of social media and tech platforms gave rise to algorithmic targeting and private online groups, driving people deeper into partisan camps and fabricated belief networks resulting in dangerous, disinfo-fueled events around the world.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Becca Lewis, Ph.D researcher at Stanford and Data and Society, @beccalew
- Daniel Koehler, Research Fellow at the Polarization and Extremism Research and Innovation Lab at the “Center for University Excellence (CUE)” of American University (no Twitter)
- Janja Lalich, Ph.D., a researcher, author, and educator specializing in cults and extremist groups
- Sander van der Linden, Professor of Social Psychology in Society in the Department of Psychology at the University of Cambridge and Director of the Cambridge Social Decision-Making Lab, @Sander_vdLinden
- Dr. Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens, Research Director of the Program on Extremism at The George Washington University, @amhitchens
- Peter Neumann, founding director, International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation (ICSR) at King’s College London, @PeterRNeumann
- Travis View, QAnonymous podcast host, @travis_view
Reading Resources
- I Escaped the Cult. But I Couldn’t Escape the Cult Mentality (Narratively, Daniella Young)
- What we can learn from conspiracy theories (BBC, Zaria Gorvett)
- How to talk to conspiracy theorists—and still be kind (Technology Review, Tanya Basu)
- Why Countering Violent Extremism Programs Are Bad Policy (The Brennan Center for Justice)
- Online Extremism: Research Trends in Internet Activism, Radicalization, and Counter-Strategies (International Journal of Conflict and Violence)
- Could One of Your Facebook Friends Be The Next QAnon Shaman? (John Semley, The Nation)
- Facebook’s Militia Mess (Tech Transparency Project)
- 7 Insights From Interviewing Conspiracy Theory Believers (Jigsaw)
Decline of Trust in Institutions
A decline in trust in American institutions is both a contributing factor in and a victim of information disorder. In 2019, a Pew Research study showed that the public’s trust in both the federal government, news media, and in their personal circles have decreased. Prior to the pandemic, a majority of the respondents said they trusted medical doctors, researchers and scientists, but trust in scientists and medical researchers declined. In an essay published in 2020, Richard Edelman, CEO of the communications firm Edelman, said “every institution must play its part in restoring facts to their rightful place at the center of public discourse as the essential step to emerging from information bankruptcy.”
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Martin Gurri, a former media analyst at the CIA, @mgurri
- Richard Edelman, CEO of Edelman, Edelman Trust Index, @richardwedelman
- Rebecca Stavick, CEO, Community Information Trust, @RebeccaStavick
- Ethan Zuckerman, UMass Amherst; former director of the MIT Center for Civic Media. Author of “How do we Regain Trust in Institutions?” @EthanZ
Reading Resources
- The elites have failed (Vox)
- How to Put Out Democracy’s Dumpster Fire (The Atlantic)
- Outgoing Washington Post editor Marty Baron reflects on the state of American journalism (PBS Newshour)
- ‘An Epidemic of Misinformation.’ New Report Finds Trust in Social Institutions Diminished Further in 2020 (Time)
- The ongoing fight against racism in newsrooms (Jon Allsop, Columbia Journalism Review)
- Americans have lost faith in institutions. That’s not because of Trump or ‘fake news’ (Bill Bishop, Washington Post)
- Crisis in Democracy: Renewing Trust in America (Knight Commission on Trust, Media and Democracy)
- 2021 Edelman Trust Barometer (Report)
- Most Americans – especially Millennials – say libraries can help them find reliable, trustworthy information (Pew Research Center)
- The Global Trust Crisis (Foreign Policy)
Crisis in Local News and Media
Local news, in crisis before the pandemic, is now facing a cataclysm. Ad revenue has been decimated and consolidation has driven record job cuts. Access to critical trustworthy information for millions of Americans is declining at alarming rates across the country. Into that void has entered partisan information sources, often riddles with falsehoods. Local reporters were unprepared to address the onslaught of misleading and false content that spread on social media and via word-of-mouth accounts on testing, masks and vaccines, complicating the information ecosystem even more.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Elizabeth Green, Co-founder & CEO, Chalkbeat, @elizwgreen
- Graciela Mochkofsky, Executive Director for Center for Community Media and Spanish Language program director, Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY, @gmochkofsky
- Tracie Powell, founder of All Digitocracy and a John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford, Program Officer, Borealis Philanthropy, @TMPowell
- Jim Steyer, founder, Common Sense Media, @jimsteyer, @CommonSense
- Margaret Sullivan, Washington Post, @Sulliview
- Steven Waldman, President & Co-founder, Report for America, @stevenwaldman
Reading Resources
- Losing The News: The Decimation of Local News and the Search for Solutions (PEN America – Full report)
- A New Tool To Measure The Health Of Local News Ecosystems (Knight Foundation)
- Give local journalism a fighting chance by creating a demand for it (Alan Miller, Poynter)
- It’s Bigger than Fox News: Time for Mainstream Journalism to Reckon with Monetizing Disinformation and Eroding Truth (Farai Chideya, Medium)
- How the government can help save local news without endangering its editorial independence (Poynter, Steven Waldman, Report for America)
- Watch Author Margaret Sullivan Explain How the Decline of Local Journalism Undermines American Democracy (Margaret Sullivan, Time)
- News And America’s Kids: How Young People Perceive And Are Impacted By The News (Common Sense Media)
Political Polarization and Disinformation
Social media has both evolved and complicated the information landscape. Algorithmic targeting and private groups have driven us further into partisan camps and deepend mistrust into alternative viewpoints. Many legacy and digital media are operating in seemingly different realities, dependent more so on either political influence or audience demands. Disinformation campaigns, reaching a crescendo in the last year demonized officials at all levels of government and expanded into areas of public health. Americans were exposed to content that depicted elected leaders and candidates as active dangers to their livelihoods and values, with January 6 a consequential outcome. This level of polarization is a critical fracture in the democratic fundamental of political discourse.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Joan Donovan, Research Director of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School, @BostonJoan
- Brian Guay, Ph.D. Candidate, Duke University, @BrianMGuay
- Young Mie Kim, professor, University of Wisconsin–madison (no Twitter)
- Dave Rand, Professor of Management Science and Brain and Cognitive Sciences at MIT, @DG_Rand
- Craig Silverman, media editor at Buzzfeed, @CraigSilverman
- Whitney Phillips, professor, Comm & Rhetorical Studies, Syracuse University, @wphillips49
Reading Resources
- Social media is making a bad political situation worse (Rani Molla, Vox)
- Fake News Gets More Engagement on Facebook—But Only If It’s Right-Wing (WIRED)
- Whose Anger Counts? (Whitney Phillips, Boston Review)
- Disinformation Fuels Distrust And Even Violence At All Levels Of Government (Sarah McCammon, NPR)
- How shared partisanship leads to social media connections (Peter Dizikes, MIT News)
- Facebook Is a Doomsday Machine (Adrienne LaFrance, The Atlantic)
- Political sectarianism in America (Science)
Brands, the Commercial Sector and Disinformation
Areas of concern regarding mis and disinformation are not limited to social media platforms and political discourse. Businesses, corporations and financial markets can be greatly affected by false or misleading information, intentional and otherwise. Whether it’s to manipulate stock prices, damage brand reputations or target consumer confidence, disinformation has become a dangerous tactic that marketing and public relations firms may not be prepared to effectively counter. It’s important to understand how brands, businesses and companies are currently being targeted and how they respond to attacks such as deepfakes on an organizational level.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Steven Brill, Co-CEO, NewsGuard
- Michelle Ferrier, Executive Director at Media Innovation Collaboratory/Founder, Troll-Busters.com, @mediaghosts
- Chris Perry, Global Chief Innovation Officer, Weber Shandwick, @cperry248
- John Poulos, CEO, Dominion Voting Systems (lived experience expert)
Reading Resources
- Trust, Misinformation And Why Brands Need To Be More Careful Than Ever (Marian Salzman, Forbes)
- Brands Face A New Online Threat: Disinformation Attacks (Robert Mcmillan, The Wall Street Journal)
- Business must combat fake news (Edelman, 2019)
- Fake news can cause ‘irreversible damage’ to companies — and sink their stock price (Claire Atkinson, NBC News)
- Disinformation: Companies in the crosshairs (James Blake, Security Magazine)
- Fake news threatens our businesses, not just our politics (Matthew F. Ferraro, Jason C. Chipman, Washington Post)
- Disinformation attacks are spreading. Here are 4 keys to protecting your company (Lisa Kaplan, Fortune)
- What Comes After The Coherence Crash? (Chris Perry, Medium)
- Mergers: Commission fines Facebook €110 million for providing misleading information about WhatsApp takeover (2017)
- Dominion vs. Fox News Defamation Filing (2020)
- Dominion Voting Systems CEO John Poulos talks elections, death threats and lawsuits (Axios, 2021)
Nation-State Threats
Nation-state actors have carried out influence operations during elections in both Europe and the United States. Even though tactics such as network operations, provocations and the coordinated spreading of disinformation have been revealed, this has not deterred the activity from Russia and China. Disinformation efforts have increased during the pandemic and concerns about future threats and targets have increased.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Anne Applebaum, Atlantic Staff writer, @anneapplebaum
- Graham Brookie, director of the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab), @GrahamBrookie
- Ron Deibert, director of Citizen Lab (no Twitter)
- Camille Francois, chief innovation officer, Graphika, @camillefrancois
- John Kelly, CEO, Graphika, @apidictionist
- Alicia Wanless, director of the Partnership for Countering Influence Operations, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, @lageneralista
- Clint Watts, senior fellow at the Center for Cyber and Homeland Security at George Washington University and a Foreign Policy Research Institute fellow, @selectedwisdom
Reading Resources
- Tackling disinformation is national security issue says former NSA general counsel (CBS News, Michael Morell speaks with former NSA general counsel Glenn Gerstell)
- The Norwegian Intelligence Service’s assessment of current security challenges (2021)
- Germany is main target of Russian disinformation, EU says (Reuters)
- Don’t Wait for Them to Find You: What You Need to Know Today About Nation-State Threat Actors (Podcast, blog, Secure Works)
- The changing landscape of disinformation and cybersecurity threats: A recap from Verify 2019 (Hewlett)
- The Fake News Machine: How Propagandists Abuse the Internet and Manipulate the Public (Trend Micro)
- Chinese hackers targeted Uyghurs living in US, Facebook security team finds (CNN)
- Mapping Worldwide Initiatives to Counter Influence Operations (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace)
Emerging Disinformation Threats
The Capitol siege by white nationalists, Trump supporters and militia groups on January 6 that was grown out of a social media-led disinformation campaign has revealed new concerns from internet experts, threat researchers and more. How will tactics evolve, what sites will bad actors migrate to and what types of digital technology will be used to disrupt society in the weeks, months and years to come?
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Renee DiResta, technical research manager at Stanford Internet Observatory, @noUpside
- Cameron Hickey, Program Director for Algorithmic Transparency, @cameronhickey
- Siwei Lyu, SUNY Empire Innovation Professor (no Twitter)
- Giorgio Patrini, CEO of Deeptrace Labs (no Twitter)
- Deborah Raji, computer scientist in AI accountability, @rajiinio
- Melissa Ryan, digital researcher on Alt-right for CARD Strategies, @MelissaRyan
Reading Resources
- What will misinformation look like in 2030 (and will we be better at spotting it by then)? (Laura Hazard Owen, NiemanLab)
- The Supply of Disinformation Will Soon Be Infinite (Renee DiResta, The Atlantic)
- How to deal with AI-enabled disinformation (John Villasenor, Brookings)
- Survey XII: Digital New Normal 2025 – After the Outbreak — Hopes and worries for the evolution of humans and digital life in the wake of the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic (Report, Elon University)
- Assessing The Real Threat Posed By Deepfake Technology (International Banker)
- Deepfake master behind those viral Tom Cruise videos says the technology should be regulated (Fortune)
Civic Education and Media Literacy
Increasing the public’s media literacy and civic educational understanding has been viewed as a critical solution to the mis and disinformation problem American society is facing. Studies by research institutions and programs by schools and libraries have reflected an increasing demand for civic engagement and digital media literacy, and hopes that it can push back against political polarization and online radicalization.
Selected Experts on the Topic
- Danielle Allen, Stephen B. Heintz, and Eric P. Liu, chairs, Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship
- Michael Caulfield, digital information literacy expert working at Washington State University Vancouver, @holden
- Francela Chi de Chinchilla, VIP of Partnerships at EquisLabs (no Twitter)
- Patrisse Cullors, co-founder, Black Lives Matter Movement, @OsopePatrisse
- Dan Gillmor, Arizona State University, News Co/Lab, @dangillmor
- Myaisha Hayes, Campaign strategies director with Media Justice, @MyaishaAyanna
- Alan Miller, Founder and CEO of the News Literacy Project
- Terry Ao Minnis, Senior Director of Census and Voting Programs with Asian Americans Advancing Justice, @Tao_Minnis
Reading Resources
- Media and Information Literacy: Reinforcing Human Rights, Countering Radicalization and Extremism (UNESCO report)
- Media Literacy & Misinformation: Getting Started (Monmouth University resource)
- Massive investment in social studies and civics education proposed to address eroding trust in democratic institutions (Joe Heim, Washington Post)
- Why Civic Education Is Key to Protecting Democracy (Douglas F. Challenger, New England Board of Higher Education)
- Alan Miller says National News Literacy Week is about solving the misinformation “pandemic” (Jan 2020, CNN’s Reliable Sources podcast)
- Want to Stop the Next Crisis? Teaching Cyber Citizenship Must Become a National Priority (Time)
Appendix
Recommended readings and resources not shared as materials for commissioners but useful for all those interested in the work surrounding information disorder.
Digital Resources
- Disinformation Annotated Bibliography (The Citizen Lab)
- Untangle misinformation using predictive media intelligence (Newswhip)
- Media & Migration Lab (University of Central Florida)
- Misinformation, Disinformation and What Government Can Do About Them (Governing.com)
- @EUvsDisinfo (EU East Stratcom Task Force)
- Political Polarization (Pew Research Center)
- Exploring Media Literacy Education as a Tool for Mitigating Truth Decay (Rand.org)
- Media Literacy Education in Libraries for Adult Audiences (American Library Association)
- Exploring New Ways to Build Resilience to Misinformation (Jigsaw)
- European Digital Media Observatory
- How Social Media Has Harmed the Growth of Democratic Culture by Design (Berkley Center)
- The Infodemic Cleanse: How to detoxify your information diet (Marc Ambinder)
Case Studies, Reports and Examples
- Shifting attention to accuracy can reduce misinformation online (Nature)
- Birtherism of a Nation (The Atlantic)
- Butterfly Attack: The Origins Of Fake Antifa Social Media Accounts (Media Manipulation)
- Fake news victims are using lawsuits to shut down the lies. Can courts cure this plague? (USA Today)
- Joan Donovan’s Media Manipulation Case Study Database
- What Americans Know and Don’t Know about Facebook and Google (Center for Media Engagement, UT-Austin)
- How disinformation evolved in 2020 (Brookings)
- “This is Our House!” A Preliminary Assessment of the Capitol Hill Siege Participants (Program on Extremism, George Washington University)
- Online Extremism: Research Trends in Internet Activism, Radicalization, and Counter-Strategies (International Journal of Conflict and Violence)
- Do we need a Paris Agreement for tech? Here’s what world leaders and tech chiefs say (World Economic Forum)
- Collaborative Models for Understanding Influence Operations: Lessons From Defense Research (Carnegie Endowment for International Development)
Information Disorder Academics
- Alice Marwick, Associate Professor of Communication and Principal Researcher at the Center for Information, Technology and Public Life, @alicetiara
- Marc-André Argentino, Research Fellow, International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation, @_MAArgentino
- Dean Freelon, Associate professor, UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media, @dfreelon
- Sam Wooley, Researcher and assistant professor with a focus on emerging media technologies and propaganda, UT-Austin, @samuelwoolley
- Mutale NKonde, CEO, AI for the People, AI advisor to UN, @mutalenkonde
- Brendan Nyhan, political science professor, Dartmouth, @BrendanNyhan
- Lisa-Maria Neudert, Ph.D candidate, Oxford Commission on AI & Good Governance, @lmneudert
- Irene Pasquetto, Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan School of Information, @IrenePasquetto
Information Disorder Researchers
- Chloe Colliver, digital policy and research at Institute for Strategic Dialogue Global, @ChloeColliver2
- Jiore Craig, Vice President and Director of the Digital Practice at GQR Research, @JioreC
- Nina Jankowitz, disinformation fellow, The Wilson Center, @wiczipedia
Information Disorder Journalists
- Maria Ressa, co-founder of Rappler, @mariaressa
- Brandy Zadrozny, senior reporter, NBC News, @BrandyZadrozny
- Davey Alba, reporter, The New York Times, @daveyalba
- Jane Lytvynenko, senior reporter, Buzzfeed News, @JaneLytv
- Ben Collins, senior reporter, NBC News, @oneunderscore__
- Donie O’Sullivan, reporter, CNN, @donie
- Shayan Sardarizadeh, journalist, BBC @Shayan86
- Daniel Funke, staff writer, PolitiFact, @dpfunke
- Will Sommer, Politics reporter, The Daily Beast, @willsommer
- Kevin Roose, tech columnist, The New York Times, @kevinroose
Information Disorder in Tech
- Ben Nimmo, Global IO Threat Intel Lead, Facebook, @benimmo
- Alexios Mantzarlis, News and Information Credibility Lead, Google, @Mantzarlis
Information Disorder and Civics
- Louise Dube, Executive Director, iCivics, @louise_dube
- Peter Levine, Associate Dean for Research, The Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life at Tufts University, @peterlevine
- John King, fmr Education Secretary in the Obama Administration, @JohnBKing
- Archon Fung, Citizenship and Self-Government, Harvard Kennedy School, @Arfung
- Hahrie Han, political scientist at Johns Hopkins University and Inaugural Director of the SNF Agora Institute, @hahriehan