Month

June 2020
A new report by research firm Graphika reveals a Russian information campaign dubbed “Secondary Infektion,” that used forgeries, interference, and attacks on Kremlin critics across six years and 300 online sites and social media platforms to provoke tensions between Russia’s perceived enemies and target presidential candidates in multiple countries. While the report uncovers much about...
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Editor’s note:  Molly McKew has been reporting on Russian disinformation for years and her scholarship has been noted by us and others.  Using the recent unrest in the US, she has outlined exactly how and why the Russians use dis- and mis-information to deepen divides and weaken western democracy. Summary: Evaluating current information operations: The...
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Virtual Colloquium on The Future of Neuroscience in National Security The Intelligence Community Studies Board of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM), sponsored by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) will host a virtual colloquium on the Future of Neuroscience in National Security on Wednesday, June 24, 2020 from 11am-5pm EDT.  Of interest...
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On Thursday, July 9, at 1 p.m., the Wilson Center will host a webcast discussion with Nina Jankowicz, the Disinformation Fellow at the Wilson Center’s Science and Technology Innovation Program. Her book, “How to Lose the Information War: Russia, Fake News, and the Future of Conflict,” examines five governments’ responses to disinformation campaigns, the motivations...
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Editor’s note: The Information Professionals Association not only seeks to provide a forum for information professionals to interact but also to increase interdisciplinary collaboration between scholars, practitioners, and policymakers within this domain. Periodically, we’ll post funding opportunities that may be of interest to IPA Members and their colleagues. Department of State Global Engagement Center Countering...
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Editor’s note:  Ok, you may have read the headline and thought this was going to be a piece about disinformation in the US….  Plenty about that elsewhere on this blog.  No, this is how one country in particular (Hungary) is being affected by disinformation coming from sources outside the country but being willingly disseminated by...
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Editor’s Note: During his time as Secretary of Defense, Robert M. Gates advocated for instruments of “soft power” and advocated for increased spending on diplomacy and for the State Department. In a seminal speech known as the Landon Lecture at Kansas State University on November 7, 2007, Secretary Gates called for increased civilian participation in...
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The Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted May 21 to approve the nomination of Michael Pack to lead the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which oversees Voice of America and other international broadcasting entities. Based on the Senate committee’s approval, Pack’s nomination is cleared to move to the full Senate floor for a vote in the...
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