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The provided text explains the Smith-Mundt Act, a 1948 U.S. law designed to prevent the domestic dissemination of American government-produced propaganda, while allowing its use abroad to promote U.S. values. It highlights the historical context of the Cold War, where nations like the U.S., UK, and USSR utilized information campaigns to influence global opinion, and how the act aimed to build trust by separating foreign messaging from domestic news. The text then details the 2013 Smith-Mundt Modernization Act, which removed this domestic restriction, arguing that the internet had rendered the original ban obsolete. Critics, however, feared this change would blur the lines between government information and independent journalism, leading to a new era where U.S. citizens can legally consume content originally intended for foreign audiences, aligning U.S. practice with other nations that consistently employ propaganda globally.