Fake News, (Dis)information, and the Principle of Nonintervention: Scope, limits, and possible responses to cyber election interference in times of competition
By Annachiara Rotondo, Pierluigi Salvati
| December 09, 2019
In the era of asymmetrical conflicts, information and communication technologies (ICT) play an essential role due to their importance in the manipulation and conditioning of public opinion.[1] Several threats are linked to the use of ICT but, in terms of interstate, strategic competition, one of the main dangers is represented by socalled “cyber election interference” (i.e., cyber election-meddling activities carried out by foreign states to influence the electorate of a target state through the diffusion of “fake news” or “alternative truths,” principally via the media and social networks (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, etc.)). The aim of this paper is to clarify whether and when this kind of interference constitutes a breach of international obligations—in particular, of the principle of nonintervention in the internal affairs of a state—and to envisage possible lawful responses under international law by states targeted by said interference.
Fake News, (Dis)information, and the Principle of Nonintervention: Scope, limits, and possible responses to cyber election interference in times of competition