Q-and-A: Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Ressa on democracy and disinformation

Maria Ressa's coverage of how online disinformation campaigns helped support an authoritarian regime in the Philippines led to her being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021. She's speaking at Hot Docs in Toronto about her work. Ressa speaks to the media after a court decision at the Court of Tax Appeals in Quezon City, Philippines Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP - Basilio Sepe

TORONTO - Maria Ressa's coverage of how online disinformation campaigns helped support an authoritarian regime in the Philippines led to her winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021, but she says more work needs to be done to hold social media companies accountable for a gradual decline of democracy around the world.

Ressa, who was born in Manila and moved to the United States at age nine, has challenged corruption and tyranny in the Philippines and elsewhere as a reporter for CNN and the founder of Rappler, an investigative news organization that used the emerging power of social media in 2012 to crowdsource breaking news.

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