Paris Peace Forum profiles Dalil on fighting disinformation in the digital age

23 Feb 2024

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Theodore Caponis, Founding Partner of Siren Analytics, project leader of the Disinformation Analysis and Listening Lab (Dalil), briefing the former Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Ardern on the platform during the 2023 PPF. Photo credit: © Ian Smith.
Theodore Caponis, Founding Partner of Siren Analytics, project leader of the Disinformation Analysis and Listening Lab (Dalil), briefing the former Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Ardern on the platform during the 2023 PPF. Photo credit: © Ian Smith.

Dalil, Siren’s counter-disinformation platform that is using AI to fight disinformation in MENA and beyond, featured in the February 2024 newsletter of the prestigious Paris Peace Forum (PPF).

Selected by the Paris Peace Forum for its Scale-up Program this year, Dalil is receiving year-long customised support to propel it to its next strategic stage. But what makes Dalil such a beacon of hope in the fight against disinformation? Read the republished interview below to find out.

PPF: How does Dalil contribute to addressing the challenges of disinformation in the digital age, and how do you envision its impact towards fostering a more informed and resilient public discourse in the MENA region?

Over the past 20 years, the rise of social media and the advancement in smartphone technology have accelerated the globalisation of citizen journalism, for better and for worse. Today, the rise of AI generated content requires a similar explosion of citizen fact-checking. At Dalil, we are tackling this growing complexity of disinformation by making it easier, faster, and more intuitive to track the news and detect deception. Having mainly worked with fact-checkers from the MENA region so far, we are expanding the platform in a way it can also serve the media ecosystem as whole, from content producers to consumers as well as policymakers.

PPF: Current content moderation on social media is ill-suited to fact check in Arabic as most tools and algorithms cater to English content. How does artificial intelligence help you bridge this gap? Can you share examples of how AI has enhanced the efficiency and impact of the platform in combating disinformation in Arabic?

It is true that current AI models’ strong suite is English, so we have developed our own models and trained them on the Arabic language. It enables them to accelerate monitoring through the scraping of news outlets and the clustering of content by topic for a comprehensive view of trending issues. They also enhance verification capabilities, by enabling users to measure the level of subjectivity within a given text, and the degree to which it deploys rhetorical devices aiming to influence readers. So far, feedback has been encouraging, and the user base of professional fact-checkers and media workers has grown to 200+ in under a year.

PPF: You released a report about news consumption in Lebanon in the recent context of Gaza. Can you tell us more how this media coverage is being consumed in Lebanon and how fact checking can be helpful in that context?

People in Lebanon are closely following the violence in Gaza – probably more so than the rest of the world, as it also hits home. Our survey showed that they trust social media coverage most, while having very little fact-checking awareness. In this context, fact-checkers play an essential role in countering false narratives; yet, information disorder concerns everyone, and each has a role to play. Our advice here: if something seems unbelievable, chances are that it is. Be critical, check before you share, and familiarise yourself with the range of analysis tools that are available online. Creating your account on Dalil would be a good first step in this respect.