Eine gemeinsame Analyse von Yomiuri und Sakana AI zeigt, dass China nach Takaichis Taiwan-Äußerungen Ende letzten Jahres einen groß angelegten Informationskrieg gegen Japan in den sozialen Medien begonnen hat

https://www.yomiuri.co.jp/politics/20260322-GYT1T00255/

2 Kommentare

  1. Stufilover69 on

    Sakana AI’s product is basically combining LLMs like ChatGPT, Gemini etc. to generate research papers (where the AI itself is „doing“ the research): https://sakana.ai/ai-scientist/

    So let’s give it the response it deserves:
    Here are several angles from which you could criticize or scrutinize the article:
    1. Methodological Transparency and AI Bias
    The „Black Box“ Problem: While the article highlights the use of Sakana AI’s technology to detect „narratives“ rather than just keywords, it likely doesn’t disclose the specific training data or the thresholds used to label a post as „cognitive warfare.“ There is a risk of a feedback loop: if the AI is trained to look for „Chinese-like“ criticism, it will naturally find it, potentially mislabeling organic dissent as state-sponsored.
    Correlation vs. Causation: The report links a spike in posts to a specific parliamentary answer by Prime Minister Takaichi. However, spikes in social media activity often coincide with global news cycles. Attributing this exclusively to a coordinated „cognitive warfare“ campaign requires proving that these accounts were indeed centrally controlled, rather than a spontaneous (though perhaps nationalistic) reaction from real users.
    2. Definitional Overreach
    Broadening „Cognitive Warfare“: The article defines cognitive warfare as the use of „narratives“ to influence perception. A critic might argue that this definition is so broad that it could apply to almost any form of international public relations, diplomacy, or even standard journalism. By labeling it „warfare,“ the article frames the discourse in a way that may justify counter-censorship or increased surveillance.
    Differentiating Organic Dissent: There is a danger of delegitimizing genuine criticism. If any online criticism of Japanese government policy (like Takaichi’s stance on Taiwan) is categorized as a „foreign cognitive attack,“ it effectively silences or marginalizes domestic or international critics who have legitimate policy disagreements.
    3. Political Context and Timing
    Domestic Political Support: Critics might point out that Yomiuri is often seen as aligned with the conservative establishment. Publishing a high-profile „investigative“ piece that portrays the Prime Minister as a victim of foreign subversion can be viewed as a way to bolster her domestic standing and shield her from the consequences of her own controversial statements.
    The „External Enemy“ Narrative: Historically, media outlets may emphasize external threats (like foreign „cognitive warfare“) to build national unity or distract from domestic issues. One could ask: „Does this article serve to inform the public, or to prime them to view all online opposition as ‚fake‘ or ‚hostile‘?“
    4. Journalistic Integrity and Objectivity
    Reliance on Anonymous Sources: The follow-up articles mention „Chinese government sources“ and „Japanese government officials.“ Relying on anonymous intelligence or government sources to confirm AI-driven findings can lead to a „circular reporting“ effect, where the media and the government reinforce each other’s narratives without independent verification.
    Absence of Counter-Perspectives: Does the article provide space for independent cybersecurity experts or academic researchers who might offer a different interpretation of the data? If it only presents the Yomiuri-Sakana AI conclusion as an absolute fact, it lacks the balance expected of objective investigative journalism.
    5. Technological „Solutionism“
    Over-reliance on AI Authority: The article uses the prestige of an AI startup (Sakana AI) to give the report an air of „scientific“ impartiality. However, AI analysis is only as good as the human interpretation behind it. A critical reader should ask whether the AI is being used as a tool for discovery or as a „marketing“ tool to make a political argument seem more data-driven than it actually is.

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