The Japan Times - Lies, damn lies and social media: fake news stalks Brazil vote

EUR -
AED 4.337402
AFN 77.949497
ALL 96.746586
AMD 448.977858
ANG 2.114171
AOA 1083.021357
ARS 1714.875512
AUD 1.685498
AWG 2.125888
AZN 2.012064
BAM 1.955268
BBD 2.38905
BDT 145.070535
BGN 1.983418
BHD 0.445266
BIF 3528.573785
BMD 1.181049
BND 1.507858
BOB 8.225762
BRL 6.214439
BSD 1.186177
BTN 108.470491
BWP 15.623457
BYN 3.396476
BYR 23148.554586
BZD 2.385551
CAD 1.613708
CDF 2545.159901
CHF 0.919208
CLF 0.025873
CLP 1021.607686
CNY 8.204152
CNH 8.191376
COP 4286.025744
CRC 588.998578
CUC 1.181049
CUP 31.297791
CVE 110.235011
CZK 24.302084
DJF 211.222538
DKK 7.468828
DOP 74.978008
DZD 153.399354
EGP 55.615706
ERN 17.715731
ETB 185.042803
FJD 2.598659
FKP 0.861876
GBP 0.86249
GEL 3.182902
GGP 0.861876
GHS 13.006462
GIP 0.861876
GMD 86.804949
GNF 10416.368516
GTQ 9.101524
GYD 248.162489
HKD 9.228272
HNL 31.335885
HRK 7.533794
HTG 155.578208
HUF 381.061234
IDR 19805.714336
ILS 3.652334
IMP 0.861876
INR 106.79255
IQD 1553.870701
IRR 49751.676815
ISK 145.209813
JEP 0.861876
JMD 186.382904
JOD 0.837354
JPY 183.589884
KES 153.004664
KGS 103.282928
KHR 4779.402566
KMF 493.678066
KPW 1062.943833
KRW 1711.71749
KWD 0.362877
KYD 0.988427
KZT 599.002117
LAK 25509.060426
LBP 105741.299905
LKR 367.318518
LRD 220.030142
LSL 18.990734
LTL 3.48733
LVL 0.714405
LYD 7.493961
MAD 10.816757
MDL 20.081537
MGA 5293.52655
MKD 61.640235
MMK 2480.18629
MNT 4209.99602
MOP 9.542264
MRU 47.137696
MUR 54.198214
MVR 18.247651
MWK 2058.282399
MXN 20.491608
MYR 4.652739
MZN 75.291426
NAD 18.990894
NGN 1654.105612
NIO 43.681959
NOK 11.432319
NPR 173.688047
NZD 1.957015
OMR 0.454115
PAB 1.186177
PEN 3.995113
PGK 5.086622
PHP 69.560822
PKR 332.277686
PLN 4.219923
PYG 7886.854432
QAR 4.33612
RON 5.09564
RSD 117.441072
RUB 90.309541
RWF 1735.465057
SAR 4.429108
SBD 9.51701
SCR 17.546644
SDG 710.395921
SEK 10.55802
SGD 1.500091
SHP 0.886092
SLE 28.906223
SLL 24765.999919
SOS 678.438173
SRD 44.909376
STD 24445.323632
STN 24.512634
SVC 10.379132
SYP 13061.896589
SZL 18.995986
THB 37.167278
TJS 11.078586
TMT 4.145481
TND 3.422169
TOP 2.843682
TRY 51.371886
TTD 8.030883
TWD 37.296322
TZS 3045.971612
UAH 51.1218
UGX 4236.847393
USD 1.181049
UYU 46.017481
UZS 14501.055082
VES 438.925607
VND 30730.296737
VUV 140.729879
WST 3.201564
XAF 656.28969
XAG 0.014184
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.191843
XCG 2.137709
XDR 0.81619
XOF 655.7786
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.532483
ZAR 18.880752
ZMK 10630.856255
ZMW 23.277667
ZWL 380.297201
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    0.9400

    81.75

    +1.15%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.75

    -0.04%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.08

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.6600

    84.61

    -0.78%

  • AZN

    1.3100

    188.41

    +0.7%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    16.7

    +4.19%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    25.83

    -0.12%

  • RIO

    1.4900

    92.52

    +1.61%

  • RELX

    -0.2700

    35.53

    -0.76%

  • GSK

    0.8700

    52.47

    +1.66%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.15

    +0.53%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    14.91

    +1.74%

  • BTI

    0.3100

    60.99

    +0.51%

  • BP

    -0.1800

    37.7

    -0.48%

Lies, damn lies and social media: fake news stalks Brazil vote
Lies, damn lies and social media: fake news stalks Brazil vote / Photo: Mauro PIMENTEL - AFP

Lies, damn lies and social media: fake news stalks Brazil vote

In a divisive election campaign blighted by fears of unrest if far-right President Jair Bolsonaro refuses to accept defeat, Brazil is waging an uphill battle against disinformation wielded as a political weapon.

Text size:

Analysts say Bolsonaro's 2018 electoral victory was in no small part due to an effective fake news smear campaign against his opponents.

Four years later, his backers have sought to replicate that feat, turning their attention to leftist ex-president and opinion poll frontrunner Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

"Disinformation has run wild" on newer platforms such as Telegram and TikTok, which allow for the rapid dissemination of easily manipulated video content, says Ana Regina Rego, coordinator of the National Network to Combat Disinformation.

Social media videos and other posts have sought to portray Lula, among other things, as an alcoholic who will shut down churches if elected in October.

Bolsonaro also has been targeted by fake news posts that have questioned, for example, whether he was really stabbed on the campaign trail in 2018.

And despite nonstop work to debunk these and other false claims, such posts find fertile ground in a country where a 2018 study found that almost half of Brazilian voters relied on WhatsApp to read news about politics and elections.

The figure was even higher among Bolsonaro voters.

In 2022, spreaders of disinformation have even more avenues including Telegram, the fast-growing messaging system that Bolsonaro has publicly embraced after having posts blocked on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Despite stricter rules adopted and better policing introduced against fake news, experts say new technology is complicating the task.

- Facts, lies, sensationalism -

The reach of fake news is impressive.

Three TikTok videos alleging to show Lula getting drunk on a transparent liquid -- which is actually water -- were seen 6.6 million times, while another five on the same platform that try to cast doubt on Bolsonaro's stabbing had 3.3 million views.

Content that combines "facts, lies and decontextualizations with sensationalism has a 70 percent greater chance to go viral than something informative," Rego noted.

TikTok told AFP its policy is to withdraw content that violates its "community norms" and may affect the electoral process, and to avoid highlighting "potentially misleading information that cannot be verified."

At the outset of the 2022 presidential campaign, Supreme Electoral Court president Alexandre de Moraes vowed the justice system would be "resolute" in the fight against fake news.

And there have been some successes.

Moraes has since ordered social networks to remove several Bolsonaro posts on grounds of disinformation, along with many others from his supporters.

The court oversaw the creation of a group with companies such as Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Google and TikTok to screen out fake news and report offenders.

Campaigns have been rolled out to boost digital literacy among social media users.

WhatsApp agreed to delay until after the election the launch in Brazil of a new "Communities" feature that would allow the creation of groups of groups, with administrators able to send messages to all -- thus vastly increasing the potential for viral information spread.

Telegram bowed to pressure to take down disinformation content under threat of being blocked for not collaborating with the authorities.

"Without the collaboration of the platforms, it is very difficult" to pursue the spreaders of disinformation, said sociologist Marco Aurelio Ruediger of the Getulio Vargas Foundation, a Rio think tank.

"It takes a long time to adopt punitive measures, and by then the damage is already done, because the information has already circulated," he said.

- 'Even worse' -

It is not only on social media, however, where lies are spread.

Bolsonaro himself has repeatedly criticized Brazil's electronic voting system, which he alleges -- without evidence -- is riddled with fraud.

The president is under investigation for the claims.

Bolsonaro, who is fond of saying "only God" can remove him from office, has warned Brazil faces "an even worse problem than the United States."

This has led to fears that his supporters might not accept the results, and that Brazil could see a burst of violence akin to the attack on the US Capitol in January 2021 in the wake of Donald Trump's loss to Joe Biden.

Trump's backers were riled up in part on social media, where Bolsonaro has tens of millions of followers.

"I fear that the results will not be accepted and that violence will be encouraged; we could experience a situation similar to that of the United States," said Ruediger.

Y.Kato--JT