How to Deal with Fake Indian News on Kashmir and Pakistan?

ISLAMABAD: An important meeting of the Parliamentary Kashmir Committee was held today.
Meeting had a briefing on the strategy to deal with fake Indian news on Kashmir and Pakistan. A briefing was given by the Advisory Board of the Kashmir Committee on Digital Media Strategy for Awareness and Dealing with it. The meeting discussed the steps to be taken to combat this informational terrorism.
Presiding over the Kashmir Committee meeting, Shahriar Khan Afridi said that India was involved in information terrorism and that both Pakistan and Kashmir were victims of Indian propaganda. He said that the European Union’s Disinfo Lab has exposed the fake Indian news network and now Pakistan has to counter these fake news through digital and electronic media.
Chairman Kashmir Committee Shahriar Khan Afridi said that Pakistan has to make its place in the digital space using artificial intelligence so that Pakistan’s position on Kashmir can be put before the world.
“We are setting up an online data repository to provide facts about Kashmir, which will help the world know what is really going on in Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir and India is a fake web,” he said. Distorting facts through the site How manipulating and distorting the media. “We need to tell the world the truth,” he said.
Shahriar Khan Afridi said that data related to Kashmir would be translated into eight major languages and the Namal administration has also offered voluntary service for free translation.
The parliamentary committee invited Ahsan Mushkoor, CEO of ISSM Labeling Solutions, an artificial intelligence company, and Abu Abdullah Asher, CPO, to brief the meeting on the effective use of artificial intelligence against fake news in India.
Abu Abdullah Asher briefed on the proposed Pakistani strategy against India’s fake news reported in the EU’s Disinfo Lab. MNA Khurram Dastgir said data on the Kashmir issue should be available in multiple languages so that people of different cultures and languages could understand the story.
Ahsan Mushkoor said that Pakistan was suffering due to lack of technical tools and central data collection. As a solution to this problem, Asher proposed creating a database of fact-based data that could be used to identify misinformation and counterfeit material.