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Portugalia walczy z dezinformacją przed wyborami

Portugalia utworzyła system szybkiego reagowania, aby pomóc w monitorowaniu i zgłaszaniu wątpliwych publikacji internetowych związanych z wyborami parlamentarnymi, które odbędą się 18 maja.

CZYTAJ WIĘCEJ : http://pl.euronews.com/2025/04/30/portugalia-walczy-z-dezinformacja-przed-wyborami

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00:00MISINFORMATION BUFFETS PORTUGAL AHEAD OF SNAP ELECTIONS
00:08As Portugal gears up for its SNAP legislative election scheduled for 18 May, misleading
00:14claims by politicians and social media users alike have seen an uptick.
00:18Some relate to the amount of support each political party is getting, such as this post
00:23on ex-spite Andre Ventura, leader of the far-right Chega party.
00:27He says that social media polls put his party as most likely to come out on top in May,
00:32with a roughly 5% lead on the centre-right AD alliance led by the Social Democratic Party
00:37and about 9% ahead of the Socialist Party. Social media doesn't lie, Ventura says in the post.
00:43It's unclear exactly what the source for the poll is, but regardless, social media surveys are
00:48notoriously unreliable. More reliable polling from various credible companies puts AD at about 30%,
00:55the Socialist Party in the high 20s, and then Chega in third place with around 15%.
01:01Nevertheless, it is true that Chega has ramped up support to become a solid political force
01:06in Portugal in recent years. Ventura claimed in a recent televised debate that the Social
01:10Democratic Party, the Socialist Party and Chega came historically close to each other in the 2024
01:16elections. The polls show that Chega has consistently risen since the turn of the decade,
01:21and last year's votes saw the party come in as the best performing third place party in recent years.
01:27With the 2025 elections on the horizon, Portugal is preparing for a deluge of misinformation linked
01:32to the vote by setting up a rapid response system to report dubious claims. According to local reports,
01:38a similar system has already been used in countries across Europe, allowing organisations to quickly flag
01:44urgent content or trends that could threaten election integrity and discuss them with platforms based on
01:50their policies.

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