-
More than 3,000 attacks on Ukraine healthcare since start of war: WHO
-
Gulf clash threatens hopes for quick US-Iran deal
-
'They looked like me': Why Arsenal became Africa's club
-
South Koreans gear up to roar on football team from rival North
-
Taiwan welcomes Paraguay leader as China ramps up pressure
-
Stocks fall as US-Iran clashes spark peace talks fears
-
Japan confirms year's first fatal bear attack, two more suspected
-
Indonesia volcanic eruption kills three hikers: officials
-
Caged and fed 'cookies': Rescuing Armenia's captive bears
-
Japan baseball mulls punishments for dangerous swings after umpire hit
-
Copa Libertadores match in Colombia abandoned after crowd trouble
-
Toyota sees profit drop as US tariffs, Mideast bite
-
Child deaths mount from Bangladesh measles outbreak
-
Eurovision: how it works
-
Former China Eastern boss charged with bribery
-
Thunder top LeBron and Lakers, Pistons down Cavs
-
Wobbling Wolfsburg face uphill battle against Bayern
-
History-chasing Barca eye title party in Liga Clasico
-
Inside the jails where Russia breaks Ukraine prisoners 'like dogs'
-
Oil jumps, stocks fall as US-Iran clashes spark peace talks fears
-
Malaysia plans cloud seeding for drought-hit 'rice bowl'
-
Where are the flash points in next week's Trump-Xi talks?
-
'No medicine for my son': Sudanese struggle to survive in new war zone
-
North Korea to deploy new artillery along border with South
-
EU monitor says sea temperatures near all-time highs as El Nino looms
-
Pistons hold off Cavs to take 2-0 NBA series lead
-
Leo marks one year as pope in Pompeii, Naples
-
In big man US football league, guys score a different kind of goal
-
Trump heads for Xi summit overshadowed by Iran war
-
New York governor orders US immigration agents to unmask
-
Arsenal sense Premier League glory as Spurs eye safety
-
Pitch for World Cup final installed at US stadium
-
IS-linked Australian women charged with keeping slave in Syria
-
Venezuela admits death of political prisoner in custody nearly one year later
-
Lee leads by one at LPGA Mizuho Americas Open
-
Hot-putting McCarty seizes PGA lead at Quail Hollow
-
CPJ demands progress on US probe of journalist Abu Akleh killing, four years on
-
'Elitist' World Cup leaves Mexican soccer family on sidelines
-
Palace overcome Shakhtar to reach historic Conference League final
-
Watkins salutes Emery after Villa reach Europa final
-
AI actors not eligible for Golden Globes, say organizers
-
Kuebler brace sends Freiburg past Braga into Europa League final
-
Rayo down Strasbourg in Conference League to set up first European final
-
Villa crush Forest to reach Europa League final against Freiburg
-
Brazil's Lula and Trump hail positive talks after rocky relations
-
Shakira teases new World Cup song
-
Palace beat Shakhtar to reach first European final
-
Rail fare to World Cup final stadium is cut ... to $105
-
Global stocks mostly fall as US rally shows signs of fatigue
-
Sabalenka, champion Paolini open Italian Open accounts
France trolls US, Russia misinformation on X
When top US diplomat Marco Rubio criticised European culture on X this week, a team at the French foreign ministry was swift to hit back online.
"Our culture," they wrote on Thursday, posting a comparison table of key life-standard indicators, showing the European Union beat the United States in many areas, from life expectancy to student debt.
Their X account in English, called "French Response", is the latest way France is seeking to defend itself against an ever-growing tide of online disinformation.
Doing its best to be funny, it has since September been battling information it deems to be false from Russian and US accounts -- but also the White House under President Donald Trump.
French foreign ministry spokesman Pascal Confavreux said information had become "a new battleground".
"We're choosing to occupy the space by turning up the volume and raising our voice," he said of the X account, which now counts 100,000 followers -- though still a drop in the ocean compared to X owner Elon Musk's more than 230 million.
The account maintained by a group of diplomats, ex-journalists and factcheckers, has been active this week as global leaders met at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss resort of Davos.
French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday squared up to Trump in flashy aviator sunglasses -- which his team said were due to a burst eye blood vessel, saying his country did not like "bullies".
Newspapers the next day were covered with images of the rebel French leader in his shades, with commentators likening Macron to Maverick from "Top Gun".
The "French Response" account celebrated the headlines.
"When the world does your French response for you," it wrote, just after Trump mocked Macron's sunglasses.
- 'Trolling tactics' -
To a Russian account that falsely claimed Macron left Davos early to avoid Trump, when the French leader had in fact never planned to be there the same day, it responded in English: "Another impeccably planned French leave."
But Ruslan Trad, an expert in global security at the Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRLab), warned there was a fine line between tackling trolls and being perceived as one yourself.
"When official diplomatic channels adopt trolling tactics, they implicitly validate the information ecosystem's descent into provocation-based discourse," he told AFP.
"More problematically, matching adversaries' tone risks creating equivalence in audiences' minds between democratic institutions and disinformation actors."
Trump this week backed down from his threats to seize the Danish autonomous territory of Greenland by force and agreed to talks.
But earlier in January, the "French Response" account had felt compelled to reply after a US user claimed Trump would easily take over France after "we conquer Greenland and Canada".
"Breaking: Statue of Liberty reportedly spotted swimming back across the Atlantic. Said she 'preferred the original terms and conditions,'" it quipped, referring to the statue France gave the United States in the 19th century.
Nogueira--PC