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The Lawfare Podcast

Rebroadcast: The Most Intense Online Disinformation Event in American History

The Lawfare Podcast

The Lawfare Institute

Military, Intelligence, International Law, Constitutional Law, Rule Of Law, Politics, International Relations, News, Government, History, Diplomacy, Terrorism, National Security, Current Events, Law, Foreign Policy

4.76.2K Ratings

🗓️ 23 June 2022

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you’ve been watching the hearings convened by the House select committee on Jan. 6, you’ve seen a great deal about how the Trump campaign generated and spread falsehoods about supposed election fraud in 2020. As the committee has argued, those falsehoods were crucial in generating the political energy that culminated in the explosion of the January 6 insurrection. 

What shape did those lies take, and how did social media platforms attempt to deal with them at the time? Today, we’re bringing you an episode of our Arbiters of Truth series on the online information ecosystem. In fact, we’re rebroadcasting an episode we recorded in November 2020 about disinformation and the 2020 election. In late November 2020, after Joe Biden cemented his victory as the next president but while the Trump campaign was still pushing its claims of election fraud online and in court, Evelyn Douek and Quinta Jurecic spoke with Alex Stamos, the director of the Stanford Internet Observatory. Their conversation then was a great overview of the state of election security and the difficulty of countering false claims around the integrity of the vote. It’s worth a listen today as the Jan. 6 committee reminds us what the political and media environment was like in the aftermath of the election and how the Trump campaign committed to election lies that still echo all too loudly. And though it’s a year and a half later, the problems we’re discussing here certainly haven’t gone away.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

The following podcast contains advertising to access an ad-free version of the LawFair

0:07.2

podcast become a material supporter of LawFair at patreon.com slash LawFair.

0:14.7

That's patreon.com slash LawFair.

0:18.2

Also, check out LawFair's other podcast offerings, rational security, chatter, LawFair

0:25.6

no bull and the aftermath.

0:55.6

I'm Quinted Ressick and this is the LawFair podcast June 23, 2022.

1:16.7

Today we're bringing you an episode of our Arbiters of Truth series on the online information

1:20.5

ecosystem.

1:21.5

In fact, we're re-broadcasting an episode we recorded in November 2020 about disinformation

1:27.8

and the 2020 election.

1:30.2

We'll return with a new episode next week, but for now we thought it was worth taking

1:34.0

a moment to look back.

1:36.6

If you've been watching the hearings convened by the House Select Committee on January

1:40.0

6, you've seen a great deal about how the Trump campaign generated and spread falsehoods

1:45.0

about supposed election fraud in 2020.

1:48.6

As the committee has argued, those falsehoods were crucial in generating the political

1:52.6

energy, the culminated in the explosion of the January 6 in correction.

1:58.1

What shaped did those lies take and how did social media platforms attempt to deal with

2:02.3

them at the time?

2:04.1

In late November 2020, after Joe Biden cemented his victory as the next president, but

2:09.0

while the Trump campaign was still pushing out its claims of election fraud online and

2:12.9

in court, Evelyn Duac and I spoke with Alex Stamos, the director of the Stanford Internet

...

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