Politics

Canada, U.S., U.K. endorse framework to fight foreign information manipulation

Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom say they’re “deeply concerned” about foreign information manipulation and have jointly endorsed a framework to counter the threat.

Misinformation concerns growing as democracies prepare for pending elections

From left to right, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, president Joe Biden and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. All three men are wearing suits and sitting at a long wooden table.
U.S. President Joe Biden, center, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, and British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak attend a G20 meeting in Indonesia. The three countries have jointly endorsed a U.S. framework to fight foreign information manipulation. (Leon Neal/Associated Press)

Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom say they're "deeply concerned" about foreign information manipulation and have jointly endorsed a framework to counter the threat.

"The time is now for a collective approach to the foreign information manipulation threat that builds a coalition of like-minded countries committed to strengthening resilience and response to information manipulation," the three countries said in a joint media release on Friday.

The framework they're endorsing was released in mid-January by the U.S. State Department. It outlines multiple principles for fighting foreign information manipulation, such as supporting independent media and encouraging countries to go beyond "monitor-and-report" approaches.

Since last August, a string of reports have highlighted concerns from various Canadian organizations about disinformation campaigns targeting the country.

During that month, Global Affairs Canada (GAC) said a disinformation operation on the Chinese social media platform WeChat spread false information about Conservative MP Michael Chong's identity and political stances.

Later in October, GAC said the Chinese government was likely behind a "spamouflage" disinformation campaign targeting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and other MPs.

A "spamouflage" campaign uses hijacked social media accounts to post propaganda messages across social media platforms. 

GAC said the posts claimed a critic of the Chinese Communist Party in Canada accused various MPs of criminal and ethical violations. GAC said the posts likely involved "deepfake" manipulated videos.

But the heightened attention on foreign information manipulation isn't restricted to Canada.

WATCH | PM, MPs targets of disinformation campaign: 

China likely targeted PM, MPs in propaganda campaign, Global Affairs says

1 year ago
Duration 2:01
Global Affairs Canada says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre and other MPs were the targets of a ‘spamouflage’ campaign, likely by China's government, that spread propaganda and disinformation on social media.

Major world powers are increasingly worried about the spread of misinformation through social media platforms that are harder to contain — especially in a year where countries making up over 60 per cent of global economic output, including the U.S., Britain and India, are due to hold elections.

"Securing the integrity of the global information ecosystem is central to popular confidence in governance institutions and processes, trust in elected leaders, and the preservation of democracy," the joint release said.

Expert says framework is 'innovative'

Marcus Kolga, founder of DisinfoWatch, said the announcement is "very good news.

"I think it'll help very quickly build a societal resilience against foreign information manipulation, especially the kind that comes from Russia and comes from China," he said.

The framework itself is also "innovative" because it focuses on cooperating with civil society and academia, Kolga said.

"Civil society often gets overlooked, but it's civil society that's really in the trenches fighting foreign information, manipulation and the influence operations." he added.

A man with short, gray hair wearing a blue three-piece suit stands for a photo. He has round glasses, a round face and a solemn expression.
Marcus Kolga, founder of DisinfoWatch, says the framework that Canada, the U.S. and U.K. have jointly endorsed is 'innovative' because it includes a focus on civil society and how it can counter foreign information manipulation. (Benjamin Lopez Steven/CBC)

Emerson Brooking, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab, said the "number one benefit" of incorporating civil society is transparency.

"In a democracy, we fight to ensure that there is free expression of the citizens of a given country. As a result, when the government just tells us that something is foreign interference, there is an understandable suspicion that people can have," Brooking said.

The more research takes place in the open, he said, "the better it is for speech rights and the better it is for the confidence of citizens that governments are focused just on the foreign information threat."

Kolga said he expects governments of countries like China, Russia and Iran to use artificial intelligence tools to "plant all sorts of stories" about candidates or parties critical of their regimes during elections in powerful countries this year.

Canadians should be aware that they're being actively targeted by influence operations and should be "keeping an eye" on the sources of their information, Kolga said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Benjamin Lopez Steven

Associate Producer

Benjamin Lopez Steven is a reporter and associate producer for CBC Politics. He was also a 2024 Joan Donaldson Scholar and a graduate of Carleton University. You can reach him at benjamin.steven@cbc.ca or find him on Twitter at @bensteven_s.

With files from Reuters