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+16 +1
Ukraine takes down massive bot farm, seizes 150,000 SIM cards
Cyber Police Department of the National Police of Ukraine dismantled another massive bot farm linked to more than 100 individuals after searches at almost two dozen locations.
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+26 +1
It's no joke: Across globe, satire morphs into misinformation
Is a US state considering a tax on breathing? Is celebrating goals forbidden during the Qatar World Cup because that is "too gay?" Did insect repellent manufacturers recruit a Ugandan man for his mosquito-killing farts? Satire, parody and jokes packed with absurdity typically draw laughter, but around the world they are too often mistaken as real, prompting fact-checkers to debunk what they call a leading source of misinformation despite pushback from their publishers.
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+32 +1
Social media firms brace for mayhem as US midterms near
A Facebook search for the words “election fraud” first delivers an article claiming that workers at a Pennsylvania children’s museum are brainwashing children so they’ll accept stolen elections. Facebook’s second suggestion? A link to an article from a site called MAGA Underground that says Democrats are plotting to rig next month’s US midterm elections. “You should still be mad as hell about the fraud that happened in 2020,” the article insists.
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+22 +1
Russia, without evidence, says Ukraine making nuclear "dirty bomb"
Russian media cited an unnamed source on Sunday as saying that Ukraine was close to building a plutonium-based "dirty bomb" nuclear weapon, although the source cited no evidence. Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, with the aim to "demilitarise" and "denazify" its pro-Western neighbour and prevent Kyiv from joining NATO.
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+20 +1
Russian news channels RT and Sputnik were blocked by Youtube in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
In response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, YouTube has blocked Russian news channels RT and Sputnik across Europe. On Twitter, Google confirmed the news, saying that it would “take time for our systems to fully ramp up” and that it would continue to “monitor the situation around the clock to take quick action.”
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+20 +1
A Russia-linked hacking group broke into Facebook accounts and posted fake footage of Ukrainian soldiers surrendering, Meta says
Meta said in a press release Sunday it detected and removed two disinformation campaigns run by groups in Russia and Ukraine. Russian troops began an invasion of Ukraine on Thursday. One of the campaigns was being perpetrated by Ghostwriter, a Russia-linked hacking and disinformation group. Meta said Ghostwriter gained access to real people's Facebook accounts where it then posted disinformation.
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+12 +1
Over 80 fact-checking groups urge YouTube to fight disinformation
More than 80 fact-checking organizations from around the world have urged YouTube to do more to tackle disinformation and not allow its online video platform “to be weaponized by unscrupulous actors”.
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+22 +1
Anti-Vaxxers Spread Lies Online About Betty White's Death
Anti-vaccine activists have spent the past few days spreading lies about Betty White, the beloved actress who passed away at 99 years old on Dec. 31. But contrary to internet rumors, Betty White didn’t die after getting a covid-19 booster shot. “Betty died peacefully in her sleep at her home. People are saying her death was related to getting a booster shot three days earlier but that is not true,” White’s agent, Jeff Witjas, told Yahoo Entertainment.
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+24 +1
New NY bill aims to hold social media companies accountable for disinformation
New York would be able to hold social media companies accountable for promoting disinformation, eating disorders and “other unlawful content that could harm others” under a new proposal designed as a workaround to federal law. The new bill – sponsored by state Sen. Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan) – comes as lawmakers across the country scramble to address harms attributed to Facebook and Instagram which were exposed in a series of leaks by whistleblower Frances Haugen earlier this year.
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+28 +1
Misinformation could be a growing challenge in 2022, experts predict
At the end of 2020, it seemed hard to imagine a worse year for misinformation on social media, given the intensity of the presidential election and the trauma of the COVID-19 pandemic. But 2021 proved up to the task, starting with the Jan. 6 insurrection and continuing with copious amounts of falsehoods and distortions about COVID-19 vaccines.
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+4 +1
Did Einstein Warn the Moon Could Crash into Earth?
In November 2021, a video started circulating on social media that supposedly showed theoretical physicist Albert Einstein issuing a stark warning about the moon crashing into the Earth. This is not a genuine video of Einstein. This video is part of a viral marketing campaign for director Roland Emmerich’s upcoming movie, “Moonfall.”
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+32 +1
Facebook under pressure to curb climate misinformation
Facebook is facing mounting pressure from advocacy groups to weed out climate misinformation on its platform and be more transparent about the extent of the false or misleading claims.
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+28 +1
Whistleblower Frances Haugen says Facebook's investment in the 'metaverse' shows how its priorities are all wrong
Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen told UK lawmakers on Monday she's "shocked" that the company is pouring so much money into the so-called "metaverse." Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told The Verge in July that he wanted Facebook to become a "metaverse company." The word metaverse is borrowed from science-fiction, and refers to a future version of the internet which people access using virtual-reality and augmented-reality headsets, rather than via laptops and phones.
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+26 +1
Alarming new report shows Facebook misinformation spreading like wildfire
In the first six months of 2021, a group page that spread false and conspiratorial information regarding COVID-19 more than doubled the average number of interactions on Facebook.
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+19 +1
China may be spreading disinformation to Americans through social media
As NBC News’ special network-wide series Behind the Wall continues to explore the increasingly complex relationship between the U.S. and China, TODAY senior international correspondent Keir Simmons reports on an investigation into an apparent campaign of disinformation originating in China that’s targeted millions of American online.
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+20 +1
Facebook claims it uses AI to identify and remove posts containing hate speech and violence, but the technology doesn't really work, report says
Facebook claims it uses artificial intelligence to identify and remove posts containing hate speech and violence, but the technology doesn't really work, according to internal documents reviewed by the Wall Street Journal.
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+22 +1
Social media misinformation stokes a worsening civil war in Ethiopia
In Ethiopia, old ethnic tensions are being incited in new ways. And that means the bloody civil war may be entering an even more destructive phase.
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+24 +1
Facebook is ‘biased against facts’, says Nobel prize winner
The campaigning Philippines journalist Maria Ressa, who was last week awarded the Nobel peace prize, has launched a stinging attack on Facebook, accusing the social media firm of being a threat to democracy that was “biased against facts” and failed to prevent the spread of disinformation.
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+25 +1
Whistleblower: Facebook is misleading the public on progress against hate speech, violence, misinformation
Frances Haugen says in her time with Facebook she saw, "conflicts of interest between what was good for the public and what was good for Facebook." Scott Pelley reports.
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+16 +1
Misinformation on Facebook got six times more clicks than factual news during the 2020 election, study says
A new study of user behavior on Facebook around the 2020 election is likely to bolster critics’ long-standing arguments that the company’s algorithms fuel the spread of misinformation over more trustworthy sources. The forthcoming peer-reviewed study by researchers at New York University and the Université Grenoble Alpes in France has found that from August 2020 to January 2021, news publishers known for putting out misinformation got six times the amount of likes, shares, and interactions on the platform as did trustworthy news sources, such as CNN or the World Health Organization.
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