Fighting Disinformation

Fighting Disinformation

Our panelists will reflect on the importance of fighting disinformation, its underlying challenges, and its societal effects.

By Embassy of Sweden, Washington DC

Date and time

Friday, May 26, 2023 · 9 - 10:45am EDT

Location

House of Sweden

2900 K street, NW Washington, DC 20007

About this event

As a part of this year’s Nobel Prize Summit, the Embassy of Sweden in Washington D.C. and the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab are co-hosting a discussion on disinformation. Having an awareness of how to identify, understand, and counteract adverse/malign information influence activities is becoming increasingly important. Influence campaigns have become more sophisticated and are used in both peacetime and in wartime. This affects the roles and responsibilities of authorities as well as individuals around the world.

Information influence activities can disrupt the way our society functions by exploiting vulnerabilities and challenging the values that are fundamental to our way of life, such as democracy, rule of law, and human rights—ultimately endangering the life and health of our people. Safeguarding the democratic dialogue—the right to open debate, the right to arrive at one’s own opinions freely, and the right to free expression—is paramount, as we work to lay a solid foundation of resilience and inoculate our societies against information influence activities.

Speakers:

  • H.E. Karin Olofsdotter, Ambassador of Sweden to the United States
  • Martin Chalfie, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 2008, Columbia University
  • Magnus Hjort, Director General, The Swedish Psychological Defence Agency
  • Rebekah Tromble, Director, Institute for Data, Democracy & Politics, George Washington University

Moderator: Graham Brookie, Vice President and Senior Director, DFRLab

The event is live streamed at youtube.com/swedeninusa

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