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Liars know they are lying: differentiating disinformation from disagreement

  • Stephan Lewandowsky
  • , Ullrich K. H. Ecker
  • , John Cook
  • , Sander van der Linden
  • , Jon Roozenbeek
  • , Naomi Oreskes
  • , Lee C. McIntyre

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Mis- and disinformation pose substantial societal challenges, and have thus become the focus of a substantive field of research. However, the field of misinformation research has recently come under scrutiny on two fronts. First, a political response has emerged, claiming that misinformation research aims to censor conservative voices. Second, some scholars have questioned the utility of misinformation research altogether, arguing that misinformation is not sufficiently identifiable or widespread to warrant much concern or action. Here, we rebut these claims. We contend that the spread of misinformation—and in particular willful disinformation—is demonstrably harmful to public health, evidence-informed policymaking, and democratic processes. We also show that disinformation and outright lies can often be identified and differ from good-faith political contestation. We conclude by showing how misinformation and disinformation can be at least partially mitigated using a variety of empirically validated, rights-preserving methods that do not involve censorship.
Original languageEnglish
Article number986
JournalHumanities and Social Sciences Communications
Volume11
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2024
Externally publishedYes

Funding

SL acknowledges financial support from the European Research Council (ERC Advanced Grant 101020961 PRODEMINFO), the Humboldt Foundation through a research award, the Volkswagen Foundation (grant “Reclaiming individual autonomy and democratic discourse online: How to rebalance human and algorithmic decision making”), and the European Commission (Horizon 2020 grants 964728 JITSUVAX and 101094752 SoMe4Dem). SL also receives funding from Jigsaw (a technology incubator created by Google) and from UK Research and Innovation through EU Horizon replacement funding grant number 10049415. UKHE acknowledges support from the Australian Research Council (grant FT190100708). For the purpose of open access, the author(s) has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission. SL, JR, and SvdL have received funding from Google Jigsaw for empirical work on inoculation against misinformation and continue to collaborate with Jigsaw. NO has received funding from the Rockefeller Family Fund to support research on fossil fuel industry disinformation. She has also served as a consultant to the law firm Sher-Edling, who are representing several counties in California suing the fossil fuel industry, and as an expert witness in the defamation case of climate scientist Michael Mann. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.

FundersFunder number
European Commission
Rockefeller Family Fund
Volkswagen Foundation
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung
UK Research and Innovation
EU Horizon10049415
European Research Council101020961
Australian Research CouncilFT190100708
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme964728
Horizon 2020101094752

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