Narrative wars have been around from the beginning of civilization. Kingdoms, republics, tribes and rebel groups have long used disinformation and ideology to manipulate political narratives to their advantage. The spread of digital networks and social media, however, has allowed for an unprecedentedly rapid penetration of such narratives. Artificial intelligence now presents the danger of an algorithm-driven mass-scale manipulation that all sovereign governments and citizens need to guard against.
One could argue that people will adjust their behavior to the new environment and become more skeptical. Notice, however, that sources that establish themselves as credible become very important in such an environment of doubt. Therefore, the new battlefield is for the 'legitimacy' and 'credibility' of information sources. The labeling of a source as credible is especially powerful as its data would be used to train AI platforms that then run the default responses of many systems.
Those attempting to manipulate global narratives are aware of the credibility issue and have been investing in taking control of default sources even as they have been taking great pain to mask the takeover. One tactic, drawing inspiration from academic publishing, is to create cross-references in order to echo a particular view so that it comes to be seen as the accepted truth. Akin to money laundering, legitimacy laundering then creates layers of sources that hide the original manipulators.
Notice how, in recent years, there has been a proliferation of global indexes and rankings. These rankings are themselves derived from other indices-often entirely subjective opinions-and, in turn, flow into sovereign ratings, investment weightages and so on. In this way, real-world decisions get influenced by sources that are not easily visible to the end user.
Bu hikaye The Morning Standard dergisinin December 07, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Morning Standard dergisinin December 07, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Colour, Comfort, Cashmere
The core of the new collaboration between Pantone and designer Jyotika Jhalani is harmony
Satwik-Chirag lose in semifinals
IT was quite an anti-climatic finish. A match that promised so much for India's Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty but ended on a tame note.
Action, Gore and Some More
Unni Mukundan's latest hit Marco has grabbed attention for its unfiltered take on violence and has proved to be the Malayalam actor's biggest box-office opening
A CULTURAL MAP DRAWN WITH RICE
INDIA observes Sankranti as a mid-winter harvest festival, symbolising new beginnings.
Kotak Bank profit up 10% at ₹4,701 cr
KOTAK MAHINDRA BANK on Saturday reported a 10.22% increase in consolidated net profit to ₹4,701 crore for the third quarter of FY25.
An Innovator Revolutionising Handloom
Dipak Bhuyan has ushered in a paradigm shift in weaving industry with his semi-automatic handloom, Prasanta Mazumdar reports
Ghora mandi: David on sale, asking price ₹21 cr
IT was a jaw-dropping moment for equestrian enthusiasts and breeders when they witnessed 42-month-old David, one of the tallest horses and a direct descendant of Raj Hans stallion, at the recently concluded \"Ghora-Mandi,\" part of the Maghi Mela in Muktsar.
Philosopher of Light and Metal
For Rana Begum, it was Istanbul. In 2019, when she was in the city as part of an international residency programme, the artist found herself looking out of her window and absorbing the sights and sounds of the ancient Turkish city, finding it captivating.
Only 3% of doctors who applied for NMR enrolment got registered: RTI
ONLY 3 per cent of MBBS doctors who had applied for registration in the National Medical Register (NMR), launched by Union Health Minister JP Nadda with much fanfare five months ago, have been enrolled so far, as per a RTI reply.
SHUTTLER COMPLAINS OF SMOG, BIRD-DROPPINGS
POLLUTION and lack of hygiene — two most infamous reared their heads during India Open badminton here on Saturday.