AI Disinformation Incident Repository: How AI is transforming crisis events
A structured evidence base on AI-enabled disinformation during crises - relevant to APS agencies managing public communications, electoral integrity, or emergency response.
Key points
- The Alan Turing Institute's AI Disinformation Incident Repository tracks how AI is reshaping crisis events globally.
- Findings span multiple jurisdictions, suggesting patterns relevant to Australian crisis communication and electoral integrity contexts.
- Extracted text is truncated; full analysis is limited to the title, source, and publication framing.
Implications for Australian agencies
- Monitor APS agencies involved in crisis communications, electoral integrity, or online safety policy may want to monitor the Turing Institute's repository as an evidence base for AI-enabled disinformation risk.
- Consider Policy teams could consider whether the repository's incident taxonomy offers a useful reference for developing Australian government definitions or response frameworks around AI-amplified disinformation.
Implications are AI-generated. Starting points, not advice — see methodology for how they're framed.
View original source
Copied.
Appeared in:
Weekly digest, 1 June 2026
"AI Disinformation Incident Repository: How AI is transforming crisis events"
Source: Alan Turing Institute – Blog
Published: 2 June 2026
URL: https://www.turing.ac.uk/blog/ai-disinformation-incident-repository-how-ai-transforming-crisis-events
The Alan Turing Institute has published a blog post drawing on its AI Disinformation Incident Repository to examine how AI is transforming the nature and spread of disinformation during crisis events. The post identifies global trends, with examples including the UK and Iran. The repository represents an emerging evidence base for understanding AI-amplified disinformation as a distinct risk category. The extracted text is truncated, limiting detailed assessment, but the source and framing indicate substantive analytical content.
Implications for Australian agencies:
- [Monitor] APS agencies involved in crisis communications, electoral integrity, or online safety policy may want to monitor the Turing Institute's repository as an evidence base for AI-enabled disinformation risk.
- [Consider] Policy teams could consider whether the repository's incident taxonomy offers a useful reference for developing Australian government definitions or response frameworks around AI-amplified disinformation.
Retrieved from SIMS, 18 July 2026.