Defending Against Disinformation Common Data Model (DAD-CDM) is an open source project to define global standards that will help protect against the online spread of Foreign Information Manipulation and Interference (FIMI). The world struggles today with bad actors who intentionally propagate false information for harm. The goal of the DAD-CDM project is to enable organizations that seek to blunt such attacks to preempt and respond to them by enabling data to be shared at machine speed and scale. DAD-CDM builds on the STIX cybersecurity standard. It addresses risk, countermeasure and playbook extensions, knowledge representation, and semantic modeling. DAD also will create data sets to defend against AI-empowered attack.
The Project's charter can be found here.
DAD-CDM is an OASIS Open Project comprising a community-driven, standards-based approach to exchanging information.
General questions about OASIS Open Projects may be directed to OASIS staff at project-admin@lists.oasis-open-projects.org
In addition to this GitHub organization, this project also makes use of other assets.
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The General purpose mailing list. To subscribe, send an empty email message to dad-cdm-pgb+subscribe@lists.oasis-open-projects.org. Anyone interested is welcome to subscribe and send email to the list. The list maintains an archive.
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The Project Governing Board mailing list. This is the discussion list for use by the members of the PGB. To subscribe, send an empty email message to dad-cdm-pgb+subscribe@lists.oasis-open-projects.org. Anyone interested is welcome to subscribe read-only. Only PGB members can post. The list maintains an archive.
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details how to join the project, contribute changes to our repositories and communicate with the rest of the project contributors. Please become familiar with and follow the code of conduct.
The DAD-CDM Open Project operates under the terms of the Open Project Rules and the applicable license(s) specified in LICENSE.md. Further details can be found in GOVERNANCE.md
All technical contributions must be covered by a Contributor's License Agreement. This requirement allows our work to advance through OASIS standards development stages and potentially be submitted to de jure organizations such as ISO. You will get a prompt to sign this document when you submit your first pull request to a project repository, or you can sign here. If you are contributing on behalf of your employer, you must also sign the ECLA here.