Thank you for that excellent question.
Where my opinion differs from my colleagues' who are here this evening is that I don't believe the responsibility for being better educated falls solely on the individual. That is important, but I think everyone has to get involved.
Since the interference in the 2016 American presidential election, Facebook has compiled a library of advertising so people can consult the archives, particularly in relation to political issues. For example, you can go there and see political parties' advertising that is currently circulating, along with the pages of elected representatives on Facebook and Instagram, two networks owned by Meta. So it is Meta's library.
When you go and see the advertising, you realize that there are politicians and parties that use codes that may resemble disinformation and misinformation. They put paid content on line that will circulate and will confirm people's opinions or further polarize them. So there is housecleaning and education to be done, but also on the part of the government. That is where the strategy has to start, to reach the public, who would better understand how social media work, in general, and how disinformation and misinformation can circulate.