Here at The Inoculation, we've been scraping Twitter for a bit, trying to find out if far-right politicians are more likely to be anti-vaxx (hint: they are). While we were looking at the Netherlands, we had a hunch that the anti-vaxx politicians are more likely to be pro-Putin.
As part of our data investigation, we took a look at politicians' tweets in the Netherlands. We found that far-right politicians are more likely to tweet about anti-vaccine topics, but we also saw that tweeters with antivaxx stances were more supportive of Vladimir Putin and Russia's invasion
Disinformation warfare is not new to the Baltic States - and they have been boosting their preparedness since 2014 [https://www.equaltimes.org/latvia-readies-for-information-war] and were lauded [https://theconversation.com/countering-russian-disinformation-the-baltic-nations-way-109366] as successful [https://www.dw.com/en/baltics-battle-russia-in-online-disinformation-war/a-40828834] . Then why did countering COVID-19 disinformation prove challenging? In December,
After elections in January, Portuguese Socialists have secured an absolute majority, promising political continuity in the country that enjoys Europe's highest rate of vaccination against COVID-19. But the side story of the election was that Portugal's previous immunity to far-right representation in parliament has waned: the
📰News: 1. Coda Story takes a look [https://www.codastory.com/disinformation/epoch-times/] at the Epoch Times, the purveyor of Trumpian misinformation and anti-science conspiracies that already gained traction in Germany eyes expansion in the UK. 2. Long Lead [https://longlead.com/] has a fantastic investigation [https://longlead.com/article/
We used a custom Twitter scraper to collect and analyze the tweets of 12 candidates slated to run in the first round of the French presidential election on April 10. We discuss our findings and talk to Estelle Brun [https://www.iris-france.org/experts/estelle-brun/], an associate research fellow at
In this edition, we'll take a look at Ukraine and Russian disinformation. Some background on how Russian disinformation works in these podcast episodes: 📰News of the week: 1. Kremlin-backed media outlets RT and Sputnik are [https://www.politico.eu/article/russia-rt-sputnik-illegal-europe/] officially banned in the EU, a crackdown
As Russia invades Ukraine, we revisited our conversation with Miriam Matthews [https://www.rand.org/about/people/m/matthews_miriam.html], author of a report published last April called Superspreaders of Malign and Subversive Information [https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA112-11.html]. It describes how Russia actors use
Georgetown University researchers programmed a text generator to come up with disinformation on climate change and politics. Once tweeted, the computer-generated disinformation persuaded test subjects, and could even nudge the readers to change their minds on important subjects such as climate change and politics. This episode explores the power and
After Spotify chose to remove Neil Young's music rather than challenge its relationship with podcaster Joe Rogan (you can read more about the controversy here), the problem of disinformation in audio is rearing its head