Canada has launched a U.N. declaration that calls for action to protect what it calls “information integrity” and to tackle “disinformation.”
Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly has launched a United Nations declaration that calls for action to protect what it calls “information integrity” and to tackle “disinformation.”
Ms. Joly launched the Global Declaration on Information Integrity Online jointly with Dutch Foreign Affairs Minister Hanke Bruins Slot during the U.N. General Assembly in New York on Sept. 20.
โInformation integrity is essential to help ensure the strength of democratic processes and to protect fundamental rights,โ says a jointย statementย by Canada and the Netherlands.
โThe erosion of information integrity, including the propagation of disinformation, weakens the strength of democratic engagement.โ
In a speech on Sept. 20, Ms. Joly said the declaration is a โconcrete step toward establishing global norms on disinformation, misinformation, and information integrity,โ the National Post reported.
Speaking to the U.N. on the same day, Ms. Bruins Slot said the emerging online environment makes it difficult to determine what is and what is not truthful.
โEvery day, the world is flooded with disinformation and misinformation. Rapid advances in technologyโparticularly generative AIโmake it more and more difficult to tell fact from fiction,โ she said.
Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, Japan, and South Korea are among the 30 countries that have signed the declaration.
Theย declarationย promotes concepts such as respect for “the right to freedom of opinion and expression, and the freedom to seek, receive, and impart information.”
It says signatories need to “take active steps to address misinformation and disinformation targeted at women, LGBTIQ+ persons, persons with disabilities and Indigenous Peoples.”
It also calls on signatories to “refrain from unduly restricting human rights online, especially the freedom of opinion and expression, under the guise of countering disinformation,” and to “promote and respect pluralistic media and journalism, and protect access to media content as one measure to counter disinformation.”
Byย Amanda Brown