Skip to main content
Home
Snurblog — Axel Bruns

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Information
  • Blog
  • Research
  • Publications
  • Presentations
  • Press
  • Creative
  • Search Site

Chinese Disinformation Attacks in the 2024 Taiwanese Presidential Election

Snurb — Wednesday 3 July 2024 15:50
Politics | Elections | Government | ‘Fake News’ | Artificial Intelligence | IAMCR 2024 |

And the final speaker in this IAMCR 2024 session is Chen-ling Hung, whose focus is on Chinese disinformation attacks on Taiwan during the presidential election on 13 January 2024. Given its exposed position at the frontier between democracy and autocracy, Taiwan is most targetted by foreign disinformation attacks, yet remains a democratic country with the highest level of press freedom in Asia; there is considerable social awareness of disinformation challenges.

This study examined the means and themes of Chinese disinformation attacks on Taiwan, and the responses to this from Taiwanese society. It centrally builds on the concept of democratic resilience: the ability to respond to threats and adapt to external challenges and internal stressors. This is necessarily an ongoing process that requires ongoing adjustments and transformations without straying from the democratic path.

Key means of attack in Chinese disinformation operations that this identified were AI-generated threats, coordinated behaviours, and false issue and misleading narratives. AI-generated disinformation sought to push fake content relating to key parties and candidates, including deepfakes of the candidates’ voices and of statements by Chinese president Xi, as well as an AI news anchor presenting disinformation about a candidate’s supposed illegitimate child.

Coordinated behaviour occurred on Facebook, YouTube, TikTok, and PTT, and nearly 3% of Taiwanese social media accounts were identified as troll and sockpuppet accounts affiliated with the Chinese regime. These made a substantial number of posts, and uploaded various AI-generated videos pushing the supposed illegitimate child scandal.

Facebook emerged as a particular battleground for such activities. Other narratives here included the threat of war and a lack of support for China from the US, and posting patterns by accounts pushing these narratives strongly suggested that their activities were conducted by nine-to-five cyberworkers. Other topics pushed disinformation about candidates and made claims about voter fraud.

Taiwanese citizen organisations such as the Taiwan FactCheck Center and MyGoPen responded to such claims with fact-checks; other organisations like IORG sought to track the sources of such disinformation.

  • 410 views
INFORMATION
BLOG
RESEARCH
PUBLICATIONS
PRESENTATIONS
PRESS
CREATIVE

Recent Work

Presentations and Talks

Beyond Interaction Networks: An Introduction to Practice Mapping (ACSPRI 2024)

» more

Books, Papers, Articles

Untangling the Furball: A Practice Mapping Approach to the Analysis of Multimodal Interactions in Social Networks (Social Media + Society)

» more

Opinion and Press

Inside the Moral Panic at Australia's 'First of Its Kind' Summit about Kids on Social Media (Crikey)

» more

Creative Work

Brightest before Dawn (CD, 2011)

» more

Lecture Series


Gatewatching and News Curation: The Lecture Series

Bluesky profile

Mastodon profile

Queensland University of Technology (QUT) profile

Google Scholar profile

Mixcloud profile

[Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Licence]

Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0 Licence.