-
Carney launches $18 billion Canada sovereign wealth fund
-
Modric suffers fractured cheekbone, will go under the knife: AC Milan
-
'Looming' risk of nuclear arms race, UN proliferation meeting hears
-
Suspect due in court over shooting at Trump gala
-
Iran FM blames US for failure of talks before meeting with Putin
-
Sabalenka downs Osaka to reach Madrid Open quarter-finals
-
'Nobody is better than us' says Luis Enrique as PSG prepare for Bayern
-
Hridoy, Shamim pull off record home chase for Bangladesh against NZ
-
Thrilling Kvaratskhelia hoping to drive PSG to another Champions League final
-
Swiss canton votes with centuries-old show of hands
-
Mali attacks kill defence minister, deepening security crisis
-
How remarkable Sawe made marathon history in London
-
British Open to be staged at Royal Lytham and St Annes in 2028
-
Oil rises, stocks steady as US-Iran peace talk hopes wobble
-
Mbappe doubt for Clasico after Real Madrid confirm thigh injury
-
Salah will get fitting Liverpool farewell despite injury, says Van Dijk
-
African players in Europe: Injury may end Salah's Liverpool reign
-
Simons out of World Cup and Spurs relegation fight
-
China blocks Meta's acquisition of AI firm Manus
-
US woman speaks of ordeal in France Al-Fayed trafficking probe
-
French teen faces jail in Singapore for licking vending machine straw
-
Iran FM blames US for failure of talks after landing in Russia
-
Steep mountainside offers respite for daring Afghans
-
Teenage wonder Sooryavanshi says criticism 'affects me a bit'
-
Japan startup seeks approval of cat kidney disease treatment
-
Technician dies installing stage for Shakira concert in Rio
-
Cut off from the West, Muscovites rediscover Russian 'roots'
-
'Joint venture in reverse': foreign carmakers seek edge with China partners
-
Nations backing fossil fuel exit 'a new power': conference host Colombia
-
Rockets thrash Lakers, Wembanyama triumphant on Spurs return
-
ECB set to hold rates steady with eye on Iran crisis
-
Team-first Kane propelling Bayern to glory as PSG showdown looms
-
Pogacar vows to keep going until Seixas 'destroys' him
-
From Adele to Raye, the UK school nurturing future stars
-
Final talks begin on missing piece for pandemic treaty
-
Oil rises, stocks swing as peace talk hopes wobble
-
'Heartbroken' Xavi Simons out of World Cup and Spurs relegation fight
-
North Korea's Kim reaffirms support for Russia's 'sacred' Ukraine war
-
Spurs win in Wembanyama return to take 3-1 lead over Trail Blazers
-
As some hijabs come off in Iran, restrictions still in place
-
Orangutan uses Indonesia canopy bridge in 'world first': NGO
-
Dealing with the dead in the ruins of Sudan's war
-
North Korea strengthens nuclear push as US flails in Middle East
-
Stage set for Elon Musk's court battle with OpenAI
-
Caught between wars, US Afghan allies trapped in Qatar without safe exit
-
British royals begin four-day US visit despite shooting
-
Suspect in shooting at Trump press dinner to appear in court
-
Fitzpatrick brothers capture PGA Tour's Zurich Classic pairs crown
-
Spurs win in Wembanyama return to take 3-1 lead on Trail Blazers
-
Toulouse fall to first home defeat for a year
What do some researchers call disinformation? Anything but disinformation
"Disinformation" is fast becoming a dirty word in the United States -- a label so contentious in a hyperpolarized political climate that some researchers who study the harmful effects of falsehoods are abandoning it altogether.
In an era of online deception and information manipulation, the study of disinformation seems more critical than ever, but researchers are battling federal funding cuts, a surge of abuse, and even death threats -- fueled in part by accusations from conservative advocates of a liberal bias.
Some researchers are now opting for more neutral language -- words, and at times, technical jargon that are less likely to inflame or derail vital public discourse about falsehoods flooding the internet.
Earlier this year, the watchdog NewsGuard announced it was retiring the labels "misinformation" and "disinformation" -– terms it said were "politicized beyond recognition and turned into partisan weapons by actors on the right and the left, and among anti-democratic foreign actors."
It renamed its so-called "Misinformation Fingerprints" database to "False Claim Fingerprints," opting for language that it said was "more precise" and "harder to hijack."
"A simple phrase like 'false claim' is more powerful and precise than 'misinformation' and 'disinformation,'" said NewsGuard's McKenzie Sadeghi.
"It names the problem plainly and directs attention to the content itself -- without triggering partisan reflexes or rhetorical spin."
- 'Fractured information ecosystem' -
Terms such as "fake news", "misinformation" and "disinformation" pre-date the internet age, but they have never been more heavily weaponized by governments and vested interests to silence critics and thwart legitimate debate.
Peter Cunliffe-Jones, author of the book "Fake News -- What's the harm," has advocated for using more specific alternatives ranging from false or unproven to mislabelled or fabricated.
Such labels "do not simply declare information false but explain the way in which information is untrue or misleading," he said.
"That way, we hopefully create less room for cynical disputes and more for better understanding."
Authoritarian states including Russia routinely dismiss credible Western media reports as disinformation.
Some governments have even co-opted fact-checking itself -- launching state-sponsored "fact checks" to legitimize their own propaganda and spin.
"In today's fractured information ecosystem, one person's 'misinformation' or 'disinformation' is another's truth," said Sadeghi.
"And in that ambiguity, bad actors win."
- 'Provocative, dangerous' -
The debate comes as major tech platforms pull back key anti-misinformation guardrails -- including scaling down content moderation and reducing their reliance on human fact-checkers, who reject accusations of liberal bias.
However, Emerson Brooking, from the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab), said the problem with abandoning the term disinformation was the lack of a clear replacement to describe the intention to deceive.
"This idea of intentionality is very important," he told AFP.
"If we see thousands of fake accounts posting a false claim in unison, we can reasonably describe it as a disinformation campaign."
The label, however, has become so heavily politicized that officials in US President Donald Trump's administration have equated disinformation research with censorship.
Following Trump's executive order on "ending federal censorship," the National Science Foundation recently cancelled hundreds of grants, including projects that supported disinformation research.
In April, Secretary of State Marco Rubio shut down the State Department's Counter Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference (R/FIMI) hub -- formerly known as the Global Engagement Center (GEC) -- which was responsible for tracking and countering disinformation from foreign actors.
Rubio justified its closure, saying that it was the government's responsibility to "preserve and protect the freedom for Americans to exercise their free speech."
"It's true that the term (disinformation) has been politicized, and that using it can feel provocative -- even dangerous," Brooking said.
"But so long as it has descriptive value, it should still be used. My organization fights authoritarian information manipulation around the world -- if we start censoring our own language, we aren't doing a good job."
E.Aziz--SF-PST