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Digital Fractures report by Canada’s National Observer

#76 of 84 articles from the Special Report: Democracy and Integrity Reporting Project
The Digital Fractures report details how disinformation impacted Canada's 2019 federal election.

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Disinformation played an enormous role in the 2016 Brexit vote and in the U.S. presidential election held the same year. In 2019, leading up to the federal election, Canadian authorities were issuing warnings about disinformation.

Digital Fractures, by Caroline Orr Bueno, details the role disinformation campaigns played in the 2019 election and how journalists and governments worked to counter them.

The report found that although Canadian authorities did not observe major foreign efforts to disrupt the election, domestic political forces can and do use techniques from Russia’s playbook. And those methods can be used to target public conversations and opinion, even between elections.

The report also offers recommendations to journalists around the world who are attempting to tackle the same problem during elections in their own countries.

Canada’s National Observer tells the story of how disinformation affected the 2019 federal election, and what journalists and governments did about it. Introducing the Digital Fractures report.

The report came out with less than a month to go until the Nov. 3 U.S. presidential election, which has brought a host of new problems surrounding disinformation.

You can download and read the full Digital Fractures report here.

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