AISD Forum | From Moscow to Beijing: Russian Propaganda and Disinformation in Chinese Media
The AISD Forum 🤖 ⋂ 🛡️ (AI, Security & Defense) cordially invites you to a special public presentation by Patrycja Krzyśpiak (NASK) on recent alignments observed across Chinese and Russian propaganda activities. This event is a part of AISD's Fall '25 series on "Influence Operations".
Title: From Moscow to Beijing: Russian propaganda and disinformation in Chinese Media
Speaker: Patrycja Krzyśpiak (NASK National Research Institute, Poland)
Date: 16 October 2025 12h00~13h00 Boston (18h00~19h00 Oslo)
Hosts: Phil Tinn & Olivia Houck
Abstract: The lecture focuses on the topic of Sino-Russian cooperation in the field of information exchange. It will showcase the scope of joint efforts to control and shape the global information sphere by means of propaganda and disinformation narratives using the example of Poland. Case studies showing Russian narratives in the Chinese infosphere will be presented to help the participants see the practical side of the research subject.
Patrycja Krzyśpiak is a Senior FIMI Analyst & Chinese Language and Culture Expert at NASK National Research Institute in Poland. She specializes in the field of PRC propaganda and informational warfare.
Upcoming from Fall '25 AISD Series on "Influence Operations":
09 Oct LLM-Consensus: Multi-Agent Debates for Misinformation Detection with Kumud Lakara (University of Oxford; JPMorgan Chase)
16 Oct From Moscow to Beijing: Russian propaganda and disinformation in Chinese Media with Patrycja Krzyśpiak (NASK National Research Institute, Poland)
23 Oct Characterizing Knowledge Manipulation in a Russian Wikipedia Fork with Mykola Makhortykh (Pompeu Fabra University)
28 Oct Bots of Occupation: Russian Influence Operations on Telegram with Yuliia Dukach (OpenMinds)
⚠️ More talks to be announced soon for November and December.
About: the AISD Forum is a collaborative initiative built with the support of the MIT Alumni Association (Norway, France & Germany). Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in the material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of MIT.
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