Beyond Disinformation — The Overlooked Threats of Misinformation and Mal-information in the Age of AI
Date: 02 March 2026
During a recent EXIN AI Compliance Professional Certification Course, participants discussed the growing concern over disinformation—one of the cited risks of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Yet when I asked them about two related phenomena, misinformation and mal-information, they were not as aware that these are often underestimated in their ethical and regulatory implications.
In a world where AI systems curate, generate, and amplify content at scale, distinguishing between these forms of information disorder is crucial. Each has distinct motivations, consequences, and implications for human rights, public trust, and democratic integrity.
This white paper aims to clarify the key differences between the three, explore real-world examples, and outline how they intersect with the UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence (2021) and core international human rights frameworks.
(Source: Wardle, C., & Derakhshan, H., Information Disorder, Council of Europe, 2017)
AI’s speed, reach, and personalization capabilities make it both a force multiplier and a risk amplifier – shaping public opinion and personal privacy. It plays a dual role:
Case: During the pandemic, social platforms were flooded with AI-amplified false health information, including claims regarding 5G technology or dangerous preventatives.
Impact: Confusion around health guidance; undermined trust in scientific authorities.
Case: Coordinated campaigns used AI-driven bots to manipulate voter opinions through targeted deceptive advertisements.
Impact: Deepened political polarisation and undermined democratic integrity.
Case: Publication of real private photos or data to shame individuals, often facilitated by AI-enabled data scraping.
Impact: Exposure to harassment and blackmail; direct violation of dignity and privacy.
AI governance frameworks should implement transparency, strengthen accountability, integrate human rights impact assessments, and promote international cooperation to counter disinformation campaigns that cross borders.
Protecting the public from information disorder is about preserving the integrity of knowledge and the conditions for human freedom in the digital age. AI Governance professionals must embrace ethical AI governance rooted in human rights principles.
GRC Professional Services (EMEA) lead at Verizon Business with 20+ years in cybersecurity, risk management, and compliance. Certified in CISA, CISM, CGEIT, CCISO, CISSP, and CRISC—passionate about cyber resilience, innovation, and industry leadership.