The United Nations (UN) has announced a ‘digital army’ to combat misinformation and disinformation on social media platforms, admitting to having monitored the internet in recent years as it continues to push for “progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),” comprising seventeen long-term global aims known as “Agenda 2030,” which is being used by the World Economic Forum (WEF) to advance what it calls the “Great Reset.”
The UN launched its digital army at a workshop in the Democratic Republic of Congo in July this year, recruiting 30 people as young as 15 to search the internet and various social media platforms for what the UN considers false information and use their “fake news detection techniques… to attack the viral false information.” The organization taught the recruits how to process information and disseminate it through UN-sponsored channels, providing them with smartphones equipped with editing software.
The UN launched further initiatives across the world, such as hosting an anti-disinformation blogger festival in Mali, though was quickly asked to cease its efforts by the Malian government. The UN also launched a radio station called the “Voice of Peace” in both Sudan and South Sudan aimed at countering fake news.
“It has become clear that business as usual is not an option,” announced the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres regarding information integrity on digital platforms.
“The ability to disseminate large-scale disinformation to undermine scientifically established facts poses an existential risk to humanity and endangers democratic institutions and fundamental human rights,” he added.
The WEF announced earlier this year that it is cooperating alongside the UN to accelerate the implementation of Agenda 2030 after progress was halted by “unforeseen setbacks” due to the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine, among other things.