The battle for the truth

      Since the 2016 US election campaign and the unexpected outcome of the 
      Brexit referendum in the UK, the term ‘fake news’ has become an integral 
      part of public debate. Disinformation has always been around, but its 
      dissemination in the digital media world is very targeted and is also 
      increasing exponentially in speed and scope. Fake news is greedily 
      ‘consumed’, spread, and frenetically shared via social media in some 
      sections of society and by some of its leaders.It is now easy to dismiss 
      an opponent’s narrative without further debate by qualifying facts and 
      interpretations as ‘fake’. There is a very real risk that these 
      mechanisms will have disastrous consequences for the functioning of a 
      full democratic society.
 
This position paper provides 
      insight into the societal debate, the background of the digital 
      ecosystem, and the many initiatives doing the rounds. The text concludes 
      with a number of policy recommendations. These recommendations are 
      mainly concerned with more scientific research into the various aspects 
      of disinformation, and investments in fact-checking and media wisdom.
    
Available documents
Author
-   
  Jaak Billiet
-   
  Peter Van Aelst
-   
  Michaël Opgenhaffen
-   
  Bart Pattyn
 
              
             
        
