Ever wondered what’s the difference between misinformation and disinformation? The federal government is keen to answer that question as part of its attempt to regulate the thing we all kind of know is going to destroy democracy: the marketplace of lies we call the internet.
Call it the Trump effect, or whatever, but we are drowning in a sea of online deceit and it’s obvious that traditional media don’t have the solution. Enter the government, and the Communications Legislation Amendment (Combatting Misinformation and Disinformation) Bill.
Notwithstanding that this was originally the Coalition’s idea, naturally the opposition is now furiously opposing it. No doubt whatever Dutton is saying about it (“an attack on free speech” for starters) is an ironic demonstration of the case for introducing such a law.
The reaction has been furious — more than 3,000 submissions, with groups as disparate as the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference and the Human Rights Commission expressing opposition or concern. The Australian Christian Lobby says the bill will “cancel Christian posts online”, which is as impossible as it sounds.
The fuss is heavily focused on the bill’s definition of “misinformation” and “disinformation”: broadly, this is false, misleading or deceptive content that is reasonably likely to cause or contribute to serious harm.
As you can immediately see, the devil is going to be in the detail of these defining words. “Harm” has six categories: hatred against a group in society on the basis of the same attributes that underpin discrimination law (ethnicity, race, gender, sexual orientation, age, religion or disability); disruption of public order or society; harm to the integrity of democratic processes or government institutions; harm to the health of Australians; harm to the environment, or economic or financial harm to Australians or the economy.
Yikes. If this law was attempting to establish a regime for prohibiting or censoring online speech by reference to those criteria, then yep I’d be on the barricades shouting “Orwellian dystopia!” alongside the bishops.
However, I am not in a flat free-speech panic about this. That’s not to say the bill isn’t flawed — it is — but it isn’t about to become a crime to post on your Facebook page about that time when Jesus turned loaves into fishes or barefoot water-skied without a tow.
The legal framework the bill would establish is modest. Everyone agrees that the regulator of broadcast and online services — the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) — is largely ineffective because it is toothless. The new scheme would give it a bit of bite, by virtue of a graduated approach to online regulation.
First, ACMA would be given powers to require online providers to keep records of misinformation and report to the regulator. Second, it would encourage and facilitate voluntary self-regulation codes, and third, it would empower ACMA to step in and create its own enforceable standards if it considers the industry is not stepping up to the plate.
All these measures focus on replacing the current Wild West unregulated scenario, which is one of the reasons why the internet is a sewer, with a new regime that nudges the gatekeepers — the platform providers — in the direction of respecting their social licence and actively moderating the flow of harmful content. It’s analogous to why defamation law was first developed in the analogue age, to force the publishers of printed mass media to learn some social responsibility for what they were putting out into the world.
In that sense, it is a brave experiment, like standing in front of a runaway train holding up a sign that reads: “Please slow down before someone gets hurt.” No wonder the government is copping abuse from all sides; we’ve all enjoyed the freedom of the digital world just as much as we’ve hated it.
The churches say they’d no longer be able to publish their teachings on topics such as euthanasia, abortion or homosexuality, for example, because these could be readily said to cause “serious harm”. In one sense, well um yes, actually they do. But of course making it illegal to express a genuinely held religious belief would be counterproductive and wrong, outside of the narrowest realm of explicit hate speech.
The fear is misplaced (or misrepresented). The draft bill doesn’t outlaw anything at all. It also sets up a very high set of hurdles for any content to leap over before it could meet the definition of misinformation. It has to do serious harm, which is to be assessed by reference to a long list of factors, including the severity of its potential impacts, its purpose, its authors, and so on. It also has to be false, misleading or deceptive, something that quite obviously nobody can ever say about an article of religious faith, since faith operates in a realm where objective truth and falsity have no relevance.
Most importantly, the bill does not do what most of its critics are alleging: establishing ACMA as a governmental arbiter and censor of what is and is not acceptable content on the internet. It is nonsense to suggest ACMA will be out there making value judgments about what people are publishing in relation to climate change or gender fluidity, and then imposing sanctions on those whose opinions fall on the “wrong” side of its determinations. The bill creates nothing like that.
In practice, the bill wouldn’t shift the dial more than marginally. However, what it signals, more than what it does, is important. In that regard, I agree with the Law Council’s warning for caution. Going broad, as this bill does, is most likely to scare the horses unnecessarily while resulting in no real change.
By the way, the difference between misinformation and disinformation is that the latter involves intentional deception of the audience. Perhaps that’s a pointer towards a potentially narrower, and more effective, theatre of regulatory operation. Nobody ever said blessed be the liars.
Sorry, but it’s not the internet which is destroying democracy. That’s absurd.
Remember the hopes we had for the internet in the 90s, before it was colonised by corporations? Remember how easy it was to find all kinds of obscure information and advice, before Facebook and Reddit devoured all the forum users, and buried their content in their awful, deliberately broken mess? Hell, remember what Twitter facilitated before Musk turned it into a den of fascists?
One major reason we’re drowning in disinformation is that we allowed far too much concentration of media ownership. Even today, the MSM remains mysteriously influential, platforming and amplifying anyone who wants to stand in the way of progress (with even bloody Auntie joining in), while all this MSM-generated drivel is fodder for the click-driven outrage machines we call the social media platforms.
Another big reason for the bullsht tsunami is the way we’ve allowed corporations to dominate and set the agenda when it comes to the internet, rather than recognising and protecting the many ways in which it can facilitate democracy.
But of course it all comes back to neoliberalism, which I’ll summarise for sceptics of the term as the belief not that capitalism is the least worst system (the traditional refrain of apologists for the status quo), bit that it’s a wonderful system which should be expanded to every sphere of existence. This is a recipe for a tiny proportion of aristocrats ruling a populace of slaves on a dying planet, and it’s been cooking a while now.
That’s not water we’re swimming in. Forest > trees > wood
I agree media concentration is bad in principle, but I’m not convinced the situation would be markedly better without it.
Mis/disinformation these days is largely led by the internet, and originates anywhere from 4chan for teh lulz to a Government propaganda unit. The sources are vast and diverse.
MSM (and ownership concentration thereof) might set the narrative amongst the 12:00 flashers, but they are a rapidly declining demographic.
It is very difficult to see any workable solutions.
The MSM hugely amplifies misinformation by platforming it on their readily referenced infrastructure, and gives it a polished sheen of legitimacy by framing it as the other side of a legitimate debate with actual truth, if any truth is even allowed on the table rather than say, a slightly less poisonous lie.
People who never watch telly or buy a paper are nevertheless exposed to the MSM machinations via secondhand propagation; the momentum conferred should not be underestimated. The vast majority of the populace look to the establishment for guidance, sadly enough.
Yes, and the internet is contributing much fuel to the fires doing the cooking of the planet. As an entity, with all the devices connected to it, and growing exponentially, it is one of the largest consumers of electricity on the planet. Much of this electricity is currently, and necessarily, generated by burning fossil fuels. Ever more transactions are being put onto the internet in the (pathetic!) belief that it is helping to reduce global heating.
The final insult to the planet is perhaps, the development of crypto-currencies and the block chain technology supporting them. Every transaction requires a large amount of computation to calculate its effect on all the other balances in that particular brand.
Whatever we might do to regulate the internet, it seems that it’s growth, and also global heating, are now unstoppable.
An interesting point, but now that so many people access the internet via highly efficient pocket devices, or larger devices employing similar efficient hardware, rather than the previously ubiquitous 250W+ boxxen plus CRT monitors, I think the internet’s existence can be justified…
Of course, certainly not the way it’s employed, but that’s down to capitalism.
I’d say transport and corrupt industry represents much lower-hanging fruit than the internet in terms of CO2.
And the only idea I know of which stands a chance of turning our trajectory around depends on the internet. I’ve mentioned it before here a couple of times, sure would be nice if I could search my posts and provide a link to one of them.
The only idea I know of which stands a chance of putting out this dumpster fire taking us all down is mine, by the way.
Global Secession – the MMORPG which wants to be a civilisation.
> Much of this electricity is currently, and necessarily, generated by burning fossil fuels.
I think ‘necessarily’ is doing some heavy lifting there. It all comes down to how much of the slate you figure we need to wipe clean in order to reach sustainability.
I’d say a sustainable global society would be largely unrecognisable to us, but a global communication network would be a prerequisite.
Of course the Coalition and the Right more generally oppose measures to combat the propogation of disinformation. It would destroy their business model.
The biggest thing wrong with this bill is the “professional news” exemption, which means that it doesn’t apply to some of the biggest organisations that have regularly engaged in egregious campaigns of disinformation; e.g. News Corpse. It also doesn’t apply to Government communications.
Kind of the thrust of my wall of text – the biggest perpetrators of disinformation have a commercial axe to grind, and the political correctness of neoliberalism decrees that anything which makes the rich richer is to be encouraged.
This bill is a dead cat. Why would those seeking to inflict stage 3 and USUKA on us want to seriously combat disinformation? They rest on a foundation of lies.
Exactly, like the UK and less developed democracies, a consolidated RW MSM, with disinfo/misinfo messaging reaching across delivery channels including internet and social media, is essential to support their RW political ‘delivery systems’ masquerading as parties, but who end up following on required policy via ‘public wedging’; Brexit was a generation in the making.
“Nobody ever said blessed be the liars.”……………
…………………That would be news to Morrison.
I believe it was, “blessed are the cheesemakers”
Akshally that was “Blessed are the lactose free, skimmed soya lite milk meek, ” – which really makes an unacceptable cheeez – “…for they shall inherit a bland intellectual diet and expire of ennui, if lucky, rather severe intellectual malnutrition.”
Like Ford Prefect’s contribution to the Book, the editor had to trim it a little.
Morrison was annointed and appointed by god, so nothing he ever did could be called into question.
Apparently god DOES work in mysterious ways, his wonders to perform.
I’d say more “Totally incomprehensible” rather than “Mysterious”…………………
I think Bill was inferencing the traditional ecclesial language of mystery.
The irony of Dutton opposing the very legislation the previous government was proposing is neither delicious nor surprising. It is just disappointing and sad. It is clearly back to the Abbott oppose everything playbook, which failed badly when he continued the same play when in government.
And Abbott wasn’t original in this approach. The credit (?) for that that goes to Newt Gingrich. Read “Role in Political Polarisation” in his Wikipedia entry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newt_Gingrich
The GOP has brought us so many wonders of nature; Gingrich an absolute Paragon of vileness, and yes, one the chief architects of the brokenness of politics today.
Thanks for the reference DF, one sentence in that article jumped out at me:
One consequence of the increasing nationalization of politics was that moderate Republican incumbents in blue states were left more vulnerable to electoral defeat.
Sounds familiar in Australian politics, Morrisons’s losses of liberal seats to the Teals?