Daily Mail

Exposed:Trolls who spread yet more vile conspiraci­es minutes after video release

- By Inderdeep Bains Deputy Chief Reporter

IT had been hoped that the Princess of Wales’s decision to announce her cancer diagnosis would finally bring a stop to the frenzied conspiracy theories being peddled in recent weeks.

But despite Kate delivering an emotional video message which touched the hearts of the nation, the outlandish and cruel claims targeting the 42-year-old have continued to spiral online.

Social media platforms were last night urged to clamp down on the vitriol as critics claimed the vile trolling had ‘ revictimis­ed’ the cancerstri­cken princess and amounted to ‘mafia-style tactics’ to force her to divulge more informatio­n.

Within minutes of Kate’s announceme­nt, trolls began spreading bizarre posts that her video was AI-generated while others criticised her for not going public sooner.

The sickening uploads saw trolls doctor Kate’s heartfelt message with the faces of Princess Diana or the Duchess of Sussex to prove how easily a deep fake could be created. The Prince of Wales has also been targeted by trolls questionin­g why he did not sit beside his wife as she filmed the emotional video.

Fuelling the fire within 30 minutes of the broadcast, Christophe­r Bouzy – an avid supporter of Harry and Meghan – went on a rant to his 350,000 followers on X.

The tech chief executive, bizarrely claimed Kate’s diagnosis meant that recent pictures were fake and accused the palace of ‘North Korea’ style propaganda.

‘I am sorry to hear Kate has cancer, I hope she has a full recovery. But it is also clear that all three earlier photos of her were fake, and the palace tried to cover it up,’ he wrote.

Mr Bouzy, who appeared on the Sussexes’ Netflix show, was apparently referencin­g Kate’s Mother’s Day photo, a video of her shopping in Windsor and an image of her being driven in a car.

The 48-year-old added: ‘The palace lied, and the British Press happily helped them lie. The countless “conspiracy theory” headlines, while knowing a lot of what was being said was true. This is really some North Korea/Trumpian type of propaganda.’

He went on to accuse Prince William of throwing his wife ‘ under the bus’ over the altered Mother’s Day portrait and said he had failed to back her in her announceme­nt.

He was among conspiracy theorists who spread a CNN clip, which has now been viewed millions of times, in which a doctor claimed that Kate’s statement did not make ‘medical sense’.

Asked how cancer could be found after surgery, Jonathan Reiner said: ‘With all respect to the Royal Family, that kind of press release doesn’t make a lot of medical sense.’

The professor of medicine at George Washington University said such operations are preceded by extensive CAT scans and MRIs, adding it was ‘very likely’ the surgical team knew of the cancer prior to operating.

Several red-faced celebritie­s and commentato­rs including Blake Lively and Kerry Katona have apologised for their careless comments about Kate. Others have face faced pressure to follow suit including Kim Kardashian, who previously uploaded a picture of herself next to her car with the caption ‘ on my way to go find Kate’.

Paddy Harverson, the former official spokesman of Kate and the Prince of Wales, said the online targeting of her was the worst he had witnessed. ‘It’s a sort of permanent doom loop. And it’s the

‘A permanent doom loop’

worst I’ve ever seen,’ he told BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg.

Imran Ahmed, an expert in countering online extremism, said that platforms were guilty of promoting the conspiracy theories to keep audiences hooked in order to sell ads.

The head of the Centre for Countering Digital Hate said: ‘There is an algorithmi­c accelerati­on of conspiracy theories, hate and disinforma­tion over accurate informatio­n and calls for support because that’s what keeps the audience captive.’

He said that the princess had been ‘revictimis­ed’ for not sharing her private medical informatio­n immediatel­y and was now being subjected to ‘mafia style tactics’ to divulge more.

‘It is morally outrageous ... social media platforms have compounded the harm done to that family at what is already an incredibly difficult time,’ Mr Ahmed said. His concerns were echoed by Twitter’s former UK and Europe boss Bruce Daisley who said the ‘serious issue’ was how X’s algorithms promote untrustwor­thy content.

Damian Collins, a Tory MP who has chaired the Commons digital, culture, media and sport committee, also criticised social media platforms for promoting false content.

‘If a clickbait story, based on conspiracy theories, grabs people’s attention, then they’re more interested in that than promoting news,’ he said.

Chairman of the Labour Party Anneliese Dodds criticised tech bosses for failing to take action against the trolls.

She told GB News that the speculatio­n about the princess was ‘lurid’, adding: ‘It must have been extremely distressin­g.’

That doesn’t make a lot of medical sense... the surgeons very likely knew of the cancer prior to operating DR JONATHAN REINER, GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL

All three earlier photos of her were fake... this is some kind of North Korea/ Trumpian propaganda CHRISTOPHE­R BOUZY, U.S. TECH ENTREPRENE­UR

THE Princess of Wales’s brave and moving decision to open up about her devastatin­g cancer diagnosis ought to have ended the vile rumours about her on social media.

Yet from this online cesspit, bullies have continued to torment Kate and her family at their most vulnerable time. These keyboard cowards should hang their heads in shame.

The chief executive of X – formerly Twitter – has urged the platform’s users to respect her privacy, but that isn’t enough.

Surely it isn’t beyond the tech giant to clamp down on the cruel conspiracy theories. Until it does, any words of sympathy ring hollow.

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