Trudeau cabinet advised to do more to prevent digital media abuse in elections
NANAIMO, B.C. — Foreign and domestic actors will almost certainly abuse digital media to try to manipulate voters and undermine the integrity of Canada’s next federal election, experts are warning the Trudeau government.
But while there’s no silver bullet to prevent it, the government is being urged to implement at least two measures that experts say will help make Canadians less susceptible to manipulation: require online political advertisements to be totally transparent and require digital media to disclose every automated account or “bot” deployed to amplify political messages.
“Those are simple things that we can begin to do to give people more transparency into how the (digital) platforms operate,” says Ben Scott, policy adviser on innovation in former U.S. president Barack Obama’s administration.
“And even if it doesn’t solve even a significant amount of the problem, it begins to change the way people think about digital media and it sets the stage for more difficult interventions in market regulation, like data privacy regulation and competition policy.”
