Lukas Bernhard, Leonie Schulz, Cathleen Berger, Kai Unzicker

Preventative, reactive, restrictive? Measures against disinformation from the perspective of populations in Germany and the USA

Format Type
PDF
Date of publication
29/08/2024
DOI
10.11586/2024111
Edition
1. edition

Price

Free of charge

Description

In 2024, more attention than ever before has been focused on the integrity and resilience of democratic elections. Concerns about disinformation campaigns were high during this super election
year—and remain so with the upcoming U.S. elections in November. Globally, the attention
given to and investigation of disinformation campaigns, meaning the deliberate and manipulative
spread of false information, has increased significantly. In November 2023, The New York Times
declared the elections in Argentina as the first AI election and predicted a wave of AI-generated
disinformation. Numerous analyses on Taiwan (January), Indonesia (February), South Africa (May), Mexico (June), and the European Parliament elections (June) followed. The common thread: Disinformation campaigns by state-affiliated actors (Russia, China) are being launched, bots and fake
accounts are attempting to influence social media, and AI-generated content is being deployed in
all these countries. The crucial question is to what extent such campaigns are effective, influence
voter behaviour, and sustainably manipulate digital discourses. This question is particularly important to answer as more pivotal elections are on the horizon—besides the U.S. presidential elections this year, the German federal election will take place next year.
Against this backdrop, we sought to develop a deeper understanding of how well our societies
are prepared for the challenges posed by disinformation and what measures should be taken
from the perspective of the public.

For this study, 5,055 people in Germany were surveyed between 4 and 17 October 2023. In parallel,
2,018 people were also surveyed in the United States. In both cases, the target population
was residents aged 16 and over.

Related projects

Cover Reinhard Mohn Prize

"To innovate, learn and make a difference works best by throwing a glance over our frontiers."

(Reinhard Mohn)

Cover Upgrade Democracy

Democracy is changing, not least in digital spaces. We mustn’t passively standby but get active. It is time for an upgrade for public discourse (societal level), infrastructures (systemic level), and foresight capabilities (political level). In our project “Upgrade Democracy”, we build bridges between diverse, international actors and disseminate solutions that successfully counter disinformation in their respective contexts and/or innovatively use digital tools to strengthen democracy.

Related Publications