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Hellooooo newsletter readers,
A man named Chinedu On Sunday, a Nigerian man named Chinedu deactivated his Twitter account, @easychinedu. The account wasn’t particularly popular, with roughly 200 followers, but Chinedu frequently used it to post support for presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg. One of those tweets, sent on Jan. 30, became the focus of a conspiracy theory and sent an online mob searching through Chinedu’s social media presence. What’s remarkable about the entire situation is how quickly it happened — from 2 p.m. Eastern time, when the first viral tweet was sent, to 3:45 p.m., when we published the first story debunking the hoax. Got a tip? Email us: [email protected] or find us on Twitter: @craigsilverman and @janelytv. Want to communicate with us securely? Here’s how: tips.buzzfeed.com NEW FROM OUR TEAM: A Site Tied To Steve Bannon Is Writing Fake News About The Coronavirus The Iranian Woman In The #IraniansDetestSoleimani Viral Video Was Also A Lobbyist For A Militia In Libya A Pro-Trump Blog Doxed A Chinese Scientist It Falsely Accused Of Creating The Coronavirus As A Bioweapon Disinformation For Hire: How A New Breed Of PR Firms Is Selling Lies Online Ad Fraudsters Exploited Grindr In A Scheme Targeting Roku Apps These Fake Local News Sites Have Confused People For Years. We Found Out Who Created Them. Facebook Accepted Thousands Of Dollars To Promote An Ad Its Own Fact-Checkers Had DebunkedCRAIG'S RECOMMENDED READS Ad fraud extortion! People are sending emails to website owners and threatening to flood their sites with bot traffic if they don’t pay up. The threat is Google might suspend the sites from Google advertising platform AdSense if they’re hit with a huge influx of invalid traffic. Read about the devious scheme from Brian Krebs. Alex Kasprak at Snopes did a great investigation that takes you down a rabbit hole of scammy dating sites, celebrity FB pages, and shady affiliate marketers — and rolls it all up to an aerospace company connected to NASA. This fantastic video from BBC reporter Chris Fox debunks some of those impossible-to-make viral recipes you see on Facebook.
JANE'S RECOMMENDED READS ISIS propaganda is still all over Twitter. It’s spread by hijacked accounts, which go from tweeting about mundane topics (soccer, the British monarchy) to beheadings. Read about the propaganda from Marc Owen Jones in the Middle East Eye. Israeli soldiers were tricked into installing malware by fake accounts posing as young women, reports Catalin Cimpanu in ZDNet. People in China stuck at home because of the coronavirus are watching livestreams from musicians and organizing “bedroom music festivals,” Krish Raghav writes for Hyperallergic.P.S. If you like this newsletter, help keep our reporting free for all. Support BuzzFeed News by becoming a member here. (monthly memberships are available worldwide) 💌 Did a friend forward you this email? Sign up to get The Fake Newsletter in your inbox!Show privacy notice and cookie policy. BuzzFeed, Inc. |
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