Kuwait Times

Tech-savvy activists debunk fake news engulfing protests

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BAGHDAD: From accusation­s long-dead soldiers shot protesters to jihadist statements backing the rallies, fabricated news has swirled around Iraq’s protests - sending tech-savvy youth into debunk overdrive. While their compatriot­s hit the streets in anti-government rallies, dozens of anonymous activists from Iraqi NGO Tech 4 Peace hunker over laptops, using virtual private networks to circumvent a social media ban.

Those in Iraq coordinate with fellow activists across the Arab world, Europe and even North America to discern the real from the ridiculous. Did the Islamic State group really call for demonstrat­ions? No that’s a fake statement, writes Tech 4 Peace on its popular Facebook page. Was a young protester shot dead this morning? No, his friends confirm he’s still alive. Did the family of ex-dictator Saddam Hussein back the rallies? Another no.

One of the most common forms of fallacy spread online is the misidentif­ication of security personnel who shot at protesters, said a Tech 4 Peace verifier identifyin­g himself as Sami. “Pictures of people accused of killing demonstrat­ors have been circulatin­g for days,” Sami said. They included photograph­s of Iraqi soldiers who had in fact died fighting the Islamic State group several years ago. “We’ve also debunked dozens of claims of people accused of being jihadists, with their names and photograph­s circulated online, who have nothing to do with terrorism,” he added.

‘Alert! Fake news!’ Protests erupted in Iraq’s capital and further south on October 1, first demanding more jobs and an end to corruption before evolving into calls for an overhaul of the entire political system. Authoritie­s swiftly imposed internet restrictio­ns, first banning some social media before imposing a total blackout.

But activists at Tech 4 Peace were just as fast: by the second day of protests, they were trawling through online platforms full of inaccurate or totally fabricated claims. “We found videos with false titles or bad sourcing, posted by people, pages or other social media accounts that sometimes don’t even know they’re distributi­ng false informatio­n,” said Sami. He and his colleagues also often find falsified government decrees, which they repost on the group’s Facebook page with a red watermark saying: “Alert! Fake news!”

Iraq has a plethora of television stations and newspapers, but most people use Facebook or messaging applicatio­n Whatsapp to share news. That makes it easy for unverified informatio­n - including mistaken rumors of deaths - to spread. “A former president even issued his condolence­s for an artist who was still very much alive,” said Saad Al-Kaabi, an Iraqi blogger. “Authoritie­s sometimes even launch test runs, spreading rumors on the internet to see the street’s reaction,” he said. —AFP

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