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France, Germany and Poland have become “permanent” targets for Russian disinformation attacks in the run-up to European Parliament elections this week, a senior EU official said Tuesday (4 June).

The European Union has repeatedly warned heading towards the 6-9 June vote that Russia would ramp up disinformation campaigns in the 27-country bloc.

“There are three big countries under permanent attack (from Russia). And it’s France, it’s Germany, and it’s Poland,” said EU commissioner Věra Jourová, pointing to work by the European Digital Media Observatory, of which AFP is part.

There are “more massive disinformation attacks on specific topics”, said Jourová, the commissioner for values and transparency. For example, in France they are focused on this summer’s Olympic Games in Paris.

In Germany, she said, they exploit concerns over migration and security, while in Poland, a narrative has appeared online that Ukrainian refugees are a “burden”.

She pointed to a false story on the Polish state news agency last week stating that Poles would be mobilised to fight in Ukraine, which authorities said was likely a Russian cyberattack.

"Russian propaganda is done with… very good knowledge of which country has some sensitivities, which country can absorb better the narratives,” Jourová said.

The propaganda was also spread through the Telegram messaging app in countries such as Slovakia, Bulgaria and the Baltic states, she said.

Telegram does not have to comply with the strictest rules for “very large” platforms with at least 45 million monthly active users under the EU’s landmark content moderation law, known as the Digital Services Act (DSA).

“Telegram is not under our competence yet, but we are now counting the users of Telegram because they announced to us that (they) have 42 million users,” she said.

‘Maximum vigilance’

Jourová was speaking to journalists in Brussels after a visit to the United States to meet with executives of the world’s biggest tech companies, including X and YouTube.

She said she urged “maximum vigilance in these last days”, warning the risk remained.

She said she also reminded the companies of their stringent obligations under the DSA.

Jourová’s comments come a day after similar findings by Microsoft in a new report.

The US tech giant’s Threat Analysis Center said Russia was waging an intense disinformation campaign aimed at tarnishing the reputation of the International Olympic Committee and stoking fears of violence at the Games.

Microsoft President Brad Smith, who was in Brussels to meet EU officials including Jourová, echoed her concerns about Russian influence operations.

“The number one abusive AI case that people are worried about is the risk of deepfakes influencing elections, especially deepfakes that come from foreign governments,” Smith said,

“And we’ve definitely seen the Russian government investing in that capability.”

  • Rimu@piefed.social
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    7 months ago

    Fucking Telegram. There *has* to be a reckoning for that platform sometime.

  • hannes3120@feddit.de
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    7 months ago

    Why only those 3? Aren’t the visegrad states all under attack by disinformation? Or is it not valid since it’s coming directly through state officials in Slovakia and Hungary?

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      7 months ago

      Well, they’re the largest countries in the EU (well, aside from Italy). The chances of that being a coincidence seems unlikely.

      EDIT: Oh, the quote says three “big” countries. Could be others, just not as large.

      • Skua@kbin.earth
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        7 months ago

        Poland probably gets special attention for being close to Russia and one of the military heavyweights in the EU

    • Thorry84@feddit.nl
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      7 months ago

      All EU countries are under constant attack. Their bots contributed to all the far right gains in the EU and played a big part in the misinformation campaign around Brexit.

  • Ben Matthews@sopuli.xyz
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    7 months ago

    But what can “maximum vigilance in these last days” do to counter last-minute fake news ? The night before the brexit referendum, facebook distributed loads of fake messages on the theme of migration (e.g. especially targeted to south asians to say they could have more chance at family reunions if there would be less east-europeans, while targeted to others to say there would less asians … ), all of this after the other channels were silent following the murder of Jo cox.