Lawful but Awful: Evolving Legislative Responses to Address Online Misinformation, Disinformation, and Mal-Information in the Age of Generative AI
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
May 21, 2025
Abstract
"Fake news" is an old problem. In recent years, however, increasing usage of
social media as a source of information, the spread of unverified medical
advice during the Covid-19 pandemic, and the rise of generative artificial
intelligence have seen a rush of legislative proposals seeking to minimize or
mitigate the impact of false information spread online. Drawing on a novel
dataset of statutes and other instruments, this article analyses changing
perceptions about the potential harms caused by misinformation, disinformation,
and "mal-information". The turn to legislation began in countries that were
less free, in terms of civil liberties, and poorer, as measured by GDP per
capita. Internet penetration does not seem to have been a driving factor. The
focus of such laws is most frequently on national security broadly construed,
though 2020 saw a spike in laws addressing public health. Unsurprisingly,
governments with fewer legal constraints on government action have generally
adopted more robust positions in dealing with false information. Despite early
reservations, however, growth in such laws is now steepest in Western states.
Though there are diverse views on the appropriate response to false information
online, the need for legislation of some kind appears now to be global. The
question is no longer whether to regulate "lawful but awful" speech online, but
how.