this post was submitted on 10 Oct 2025
12 points (100.0% liked)

Europe

589 readers
93 users here now

Europe community on dbzer0. Intended to be a place to discuss European news, politics, or just general topics from a European perspective. Since this is on dbzer0 expect the community to lean more leftist-anarchist but a wide range of views are accepted here (within reason).

Rules:

1. No Bigotry or Hate SpeechAny forms of Homophobia, Transphobia, Queerphobia, Racism, or Ableism will be met with swift and harsh action and will not be tolerated here whatsoever. Bigots will be banned immediately on-sight. This includes apologia of it. Trying to be politely or intellectually bigoted i.e. "Just asking questions" won't be tolerated.

2. No ZionismAny forms of Zionism or Zionist rhetoric will not be tolerated here, this includes Zionist apologia, accusations of antisemitism towards anti-Zionists, or blatant denial or downplaying of the genocide towards Palestinians. Any attempt to uphold or prop up the IHRA definition of antisemitism, will be treated as Zionism. Anyone engaging in Pro-Zionist sentiment or apologia will be actioned in accordance with its severity.

Note: Trying to find loopholes or whataboutery to see what is or isn't genocide denial or Zionism will be treated as a violation of this rule. Don't test us.

3. Stay CivilPlease maintain civil discourse in the community. Do not engage in arguments with others, name-calling, or insults. Note that calling out bigotry or Zionism is not considered an insult. In heated arguments users are encouraged to or even required to disengage failure to do so will result in mod action.

4. No MisinformationSpreading of misinformation intentionally in this community is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. Spreading misinformation hurts the credibility of the community and can mislead people sometimes in dangerous ways. Users who intentionally post misinformation as articles, comment answers, or in attempt to win arguments will be actioned swiftly.

Note: This includes Russian and Chinese propaganda. Users with a history of such posting will be banned on sight.

5. No AI ContentPlease do not post articles or content primarily created using generative AI. Generative AI content may contain misinformation or be lower quality and thus is discouraged. Posts and comments featuring it will be removed. However this community does not allow or tolerate Anti-AI trolling or hostility and users who engage in such behavior will be actioned for it, additionally Anti-AI trolling violates Rule 3 and often Rule 4 so it is generally unacceptable already.


Note: Rules 1 & 2 may be subject to preemptive mod action due to their severity, and they apply to a user's entire post history. Not just this community.

founded 4 months ago
MODERATORS
 

cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/5003997

Archived link

Cybersecurity and disinformation experts in Poland choose their words carefully when they speak of a state of war. The war waged by Russia and Belarus against the European Union and North Atlantic Treaty Organization began in 2014 with the invasion of Crimea and the Donbas. The conflict, with its own history and distinct phases, escalated during the night of September 10 to 11, when around 20 Russian drones violated Polish airspace. NATO, for the first time since its founding in 1949, was forced to open fire on enemy flying objects in European airspace.

That night, the Polish internet exploded. Many experts described it as a tsunami of disinformation. "Over the course of that night, we analyzed around 200,000 mentions [statuses, messages, comments] spreading the Russian narrative, or 200 to 300 mentions per minute," said Michal Fedorowicz, president of the Res Futura collective, which specializes in the analysis of social media and its impact on public opinion. "In terms of scale, it's the equivalent of what happens during an election night for a presidential vote."

But all these mentions carried very carefully crafted messages. According to these posts, the attack was a Ukrainian provocation, meant to drag Poles into a war that was not theirs and NATO into a third world war. In the same narrative, the Polish military and NATO were described as ineffective and powerless despite their considerable resources. And above all, the Polish and transatlantic authorities were accused of covering up the truth about these events.

...

"Within just a few hours, the enemy managed to saturate the algorithms of our social media and modify their parameters to its advantage," Fedorowicz explained.

The result: When Polish citizens woke up and checked their smartphones, they were very likely to find a digital environment awash with falsehoods. The impact was measurable. Of all the comments analyzed by Res Futura, 38% blamed Ukrainians for the incident, 34% blamed Russians and a significant share blamed NATO.

...

"Not all the messages promoted by Russian propaganda are strictly false, but they can be exaggerated for harmful purposes," noted Filip Glowacz, an expert on the external threat analysis team at NASK. "For example, the claim that the Belarusian authorities warned the Poles about the imminent arrival of drones. That's true, even if the military agrees that the Belarusians did not act in good faith. The subliminal message is clear: The Belarusians are kind, the Polish military is lying to you, the Poles are wrong to close their borders." These attacks continued, with varying degrees of intensity, throughout the month of September.

...

"Discrediting Ukrainian immigrants, Ukrainian refugees and the Ukrainian government has been the number one message of Russian propaganda for three years, in Poland as well as the rest of Europe," Fedorowicz continued. "The goal is to erode public support, and therefore political support, for the war effort." This strategy has only met with partial success. While anti-Ukrainian sentiment has soared in some countries, including Poland โ€“ surfacing even in the rhetoric of the moderate political class โ€“ it has not translated into actual political decisions. Across Europe, the front supporting aid to Ukraine remains united, and no one is questioning the need to increase defense spending.

...

The night of September 10 to 11, which exposed certain weaknesses in the Alliance's anti-drone defense, also marks a turning point toward a new phase of this information war, with a new dominant message for the European public. "Now, citizens must question the effectiveness and usefulness of NATO," Fedorowicz noted. "The strategic goal is to sow doubt about the reliability of the Alliance, so that citizens start to question the need to increase military budgets."

Faced with hundreds of thousands of fake accounts flooding social media with these messages, regulators, for their part, feel powerless. "We collaborate with companies like Facebook, X [formerly Twitter] or TikTok," said Filip Glowacz. "But despite our requests, it is very difficult to get them to remove anything. Doing so would impact their business model. We have no coercive instruments to fight the armies of bots from the East. That's what makes this war so asymmetrical."

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here