Truth Cops
Leaked Documents Outline DHS’s Plans to Police Disinformation
Ken Klippenstein, Lee Fang
October 31 2022, 10:00 a.m.
The Department of Homeland Security is quietly broadening its
efforts to curb speech it considers dangerous, an investigation by
The Intercept has found. Years of internal DHS memos, emails, and
documents — obtained via leaks and an ongoing lawsuit, as well as
public documents — illustrate an expansive effort by the agency to
influence tech platforms.
The work, much of which remains unknown to the American public, came
into clearer view earlier this year when DHS announced a new
“Disinformation Governance Board”: a panel designed to police
misinformation (false information spread unintentionally),
disinformation (false information spread intentionally), and
malinformation (factual information shared, typically out of
context, with harmful intent) that allegedly threatens U.S.
interests. While the board was widely ridiculed, immediately scaled
back, and then shut down within a few months, other initiatives are
underway as DHS pivots to monitoring social media now that its
original mandate — the war on terror — has been wound down.
Behind closed doors, and through pressure on private platforms, the
U.S. government has used its power to try to shape online discourse.
According to meeting minutes and other records appended to a lawsuit
filed by Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, a Republican who is
also running for Senate, discussions have ranged from the scale and
scope of government intervention in online discourse to the
mechanics of streamlining takedown requests for false or
intentionally misleading information.
[...]
continua qui:
https://theintercept.com/2022/10/31/social-media-disinformation-dhs/