Investigation by VOA and social media analytics firm Doublethink Lab discovers several accounts that post videos following the same pattern
Through both genuine and AI-generated images and videos, Chinese operatives are intensifying divisive social issues, including LGBTQ+ rights, abortion, immigration, race, gun control, and crime rates
China’s Spamouflage network is a state-sponsored operation aimed at supporting the Chinese government and undermining its critics
Beijing's political, economic help keep current leadership in power
In his short time in US Senate, Vance has been a hawk on China
The launch of city and provincial propaganda centers comes as China’s image faces a global backlash
Report from rights group Article 19 says Beijing is using its technology to reshape region's standards of digital freedom, governance to increasingly match its own
Starting June 1, soap operas must be register and reviewed before they can go online
The controversy has shocked Chinese observers, who are now questioning the fairness of the competition.
British researchers say Chinese Spamouflage-linked accounts pretend to be right-wing Americans to exploit domestic divisions, in new tactic dubbed 'MAGAflage'
Russia and China target the recent escalation on the U.S. borders with Mexico with simultaneous disinformation campaigns but using different tactics.
In 2023, the Chinese government spent millions of dollars on influence campaigns designed to better Beijing’s image and damage the reputation of those the country’s communist leadership considers foreign adversaries.
United Nations membership includes a state’s right to be a UNESCO member. Any UN member can withdraw and rejoin UNESCO if it pays the membership fee. In addition, the U.S. is a UNESCO founding member.
China’s estimate is based on two assumptions: first, that Australia will receive eight submarines under the AUKUS deal; second, that their reactors contain between 1.6 and 2 tons of highly enriched uranium. Neither of those assumptions can be verified.
India was not the first to use visas as a weapon. The two Asian giants are equally at fault for denying visas to each other’s journalists. China has a record of using visas as a weapon to stifle opposing views.
The lab, funded by the U.S., is researching lethal pathogens that could have dual-use purposes. The goal, however, is exactly the opposite: to study these dangerous pathogens and prevent them from being misused or becoming the next epidemic.
Beijing is accelerating the use of economic coercion to pursue its foreign policy goals.
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