The ways that the government can potentially manage these kinds of disinformation is simply to provide citizens with a means to identify and debunk disinformation. I think that there are already media outlets that are starting to do this. I believe that governments can also assist with that.
The information that is being circulated by the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, I should add, is also useful data for us, so I am also hesitant to completely silence them. There is a clear link between the kinds of narratives and conspiracy theories that are promoted by the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other state actors and the dynamics of the war. In this sense, we gain a lot of vital information that might be lost if they were summarily dismissed.
That's not to, in any way, shape or form, justify the disinformation that is being put out by the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs or by other Russian state actors. It's merely to point out that we would lose a great deal from completely cutting them out from access, not just in terms of our observations but also in our understanding of Russia's motives and the valences in the war.