EU political parties sign anti-disinformation election pledge

Vera Jourova (5th R), Vice-President of the European Commission in charge of Values and Transparency, attends the ceremony of signature of Pledges with EU Political parties. Lukasz Kobus/European Commission/dpa

Representatives of the European Union's main political coalitions on Tuesday signed a pledge not to spread disinformation or deepfakes during the forthcoming elections to the European Parliament in June.

"Elections should be a competition of ideas and opinions, not of dirty manipulative methods," European Commission Vice President Věra Jourová said at the signing ceremony in Brussels.

The signatories commit to refrain from from making or using "falsified, fabricated, doxed or stolen data" or "any type of deceptive content using audio, images or video," among other things.

There has been growing anxiety about disinformation in the EU for several years, particularly as tensions have risen with Russia, which has been accused of trying to destabilize elections in the West using targeted disinformation and propaganda.

The rapid advancement of generative artificial intelligence (AI), which can create increasingly convincing fake images and videos, has further stoked the concerns.

The signatories represent the parliament's seven broad coalitions of national political parties including two conservative groups, social democrats, liberals, greens, the radical left and the nationalist right.

A commission press release announcing the signing on Tuesday said it had received assurances from the right-wing nationalist group, called Identity and Democracy (ID), that it intended to sign.

An ID group official told dpa later on Tuesday that the party had signed, but it did not participate fully in the signing ceremony at commission headquarters earlier in the day.

The signatories pledged to "ensure an ethical and transparent use of campaign tools and technologies, including artificial intelligence."

The code of conduct also commits them not to use "fake accounts or automatic bots to manipulate voter opinions," as well as "content created and disseminated by actors from outside the EU" that are "seeking to erode European values and principles."

The pledge allows the use of AI-generated content when it's clearly labelled - for example with a watermark.

A separate code of conduct on disinformation was signed by the major online platforms in 2022. X - formerly known as Twitter - withdrew from the code in 2023.

Vera Jourova, Vice-President of the European Commission in charge of Values and Transparency, speaks during the ceremony of signature of Pledges with EU Political parties. Lukasz Kobus/European Commission/dpa

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