DisinfoDocket 22 June
DisinfoDocket curates influence operations-related academic research, news, events and job opportunities.
Hi! I'm Kate and welcome to DisinfoDocket. DisinfoDocket curates influence operations-related academic research, news, events and job opportunities.
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Don't miss -
* Bulgaria approved surveillance exports to foreign spy agencies, leaked licenses show
* India's Telegram Ban Risks Normalizing Platform-Wide Blocking
* How news creators are impacting politics and media around the world
* Bulgaria approved surveillance exports to foreign spy agencies, leaked licenses show
* India's Telegram Ban Risks Normalizing Platform-Wide Blocking
* How news creators are impacting politics and media around the world

Highlights
- How the social media ban could reshape how all of us use the internet (BBC, 21 June)
- Britain’s next prime minister faces deep foreign policy challenges – whether Burnham or another (Chatham House, 22 June)
- Fact-checkers from Denmark, Nigeria, Poland, Spain win GlobalFact awards (Poynter, 22 June)
- No Spoilers: When Journalists Don't Know the Ending (Psychology Today, 21 June)
1. Academia & Research
- Misinformation Propagation in Benign Multi-Agent Systems (arXiv, 15 June)
2. Platforms & Technology
- The different reasons why television, newspapers, and radio are losing their news audiences (Reuters Institute, 16 June)
LISTEN - The battle in rural America against AI data centres (Americast, BBC, 12 June)
3. Russia & Ukraine
- Yandex: From tech innovation to information control (EUvsDisinfo, 17 June)
- Police raid malware network tied to Russia's Evil Corp hacker group (The Record, 19 June)
- Why is Bulgaria threatening to veto EU's Russia sanctions? (DW, 22 June)