Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference (Disinformation 2.0)
Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference (Disinformation 2.0) – How Patterns of Behavior in the Information Domain Threaten or Attack Organizations’ Values, Procedures and Political Processes
Over the past decade, foreign information manipulation and interference (FIMI) operations have grown in complexity and scope. More specifically, Russia and China have continuously invested resources into developing their hybrid warfare strategy. Hybrid warfare goes beyond physical confrontation. It can include the use of conventional forces but also other elements, such as FIMI operations, to shape the policy, geostrategic positions, public opinion, and capabilities of a target country.
The speed, availability, and cohesion of tools and tactics employed by foreign malign actors have increased in recent years as the result of increasing global interconnectivity via social media and the internet at large, as well as technological advancements – such as rapid improvements in generative AI – that increasingly enable faster, better, and cheaper FIMI operations and tactics including deep fakes, and manipulated content including text, images, audio, and video. Additionally, these campaigns increasingly seek to destabilize the very foundations of target countries – undermining democratic principles through the targeting of elections, eroding public trust in institutions and local media, and exploiting social divisions to distract and subvert the target’s efforts toward progress.
The speaker will walk the audience through some Asia Pacific case studies that highlight patterns that targeted both NATO as an organization as well as individual NATO member countries and how there is often a link between different tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) – such as usage of proxies, usage of sock puppet accounts, and increasing usage of generative AI to support their activities. FIMI campaigns also frequently target specific demographics to influence decision-making processes in politics, economy, or societal affairs. The lessons I will share will help any organization better prepare for these narrative attacks created by misinformation and disinformation.
Although attribution is not always straightforward on social media, it often becomes obvious through narrative analysis and social network analysis that foreign actors and the ecosystems they cultivate online covertly try to influence international public opinion on a wide range of topics and issues by amplifying polarization and eroding democratic discourse. The World Economic Forum 2024 Global Risks Report recognizes misinformation and disinformation as the #1 global threat with technological, economic, environmental, social, and political impacts. This talk will go deep into sharing examples and stories of why I also believe this to be the biggest risk to all organizations.
Full Abstract and Presentation Materials:
https://www.blackhat.com/asia-25/briefings/schedule/#foreign-information-manipulation-and-interference-disinformation-20—how-patterns-of-behavior-in-the-information-domain-threaten-or-attack-organizations-values-procedures-and-political-processes-43447Black HatRead More