The
comments by EU foreign policy head Josep Borrell and the
European Commission's Vice President for values and transparency
Vera Jourova underscore the bloc's concerns about the prevalence
of misleading news on COVID-19 and the attempts by foreign
actors to influence Europe.
"It really showed that disinformation does not only harm the
health of our democracies, it also harms the health of our
citizens. It can negatively impact the economy and undermine the
response of the public authorities and therefore weaken the
health measures," Jourova told a news conference.
She said the next fake news front was vaccination, citing a
study showing that Germans' willingness to be vaccinated had
fallen by 20 percentage points in two months.
The Commission said online platforms should provide monthly
reports with details on their actions to promote authoritative
content and to limit coronavirus disinformation and advertising
related to it.
Jourova also said Chinese video app TikTok, owned by Chinese
company ByteDance, will be joining the bloc's voluntary code of
conduct to combat fake news on its platform. Signatories to the
code of conduct include Google, Facebook, Twitter and Mozilla.
Borrell described the fake news fight as involving warriors
wielding keyboards rather than swords.
"Foreign actors and certain third countries, in particular
Russia and China, have engaged in targeted influence operations
and disinformation campaigns in the EU, its neighbourhood, and
globally," the Commission said.
The EU executive plans to counter foreign actors by stepping up
its communication strategy and diplomacy, and provide more
support to free and independent media, fact checkers and
researchers.
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; editing by Phil Blenkins)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|