Kent Messenger Maidstone

The bogus news site, a savvy teen and ‘robot’ journalist­s

To the untrained eye, the ‘Kent Chronicle’ may have appeared to be a legitimate local news website, filled with stories of life across the county. In reality it was the bedroom creation of a schoolboy with a flair for self-promotion. By Rhys Griffiths and

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Confident, fluent in the latest buzzwords, and keen to tell the world about his growing side-hustle, sixth-form student Laurence Moss is every inch the kind of tech-savvy Gen Z entreprene­ur who could make it big from the box room of his parents’ house.

The 17-year-old can boast of how his Instagram marketing agency Greedy Growth is helping businesses and profession­al athletes reach bigger audiences online.

So far, so on brand for the generation that knows how to make a buck from social media. So much so that news outlets around the world have even reported on the exploits of the Ryarsh teen who has launched what appears to be a flourishin­g business during a pandemic.

But we have not arranged to sit down with this would-be marketing guru to talk Instagram, Snapchat or TikTok. We are interested in something a little more traditiona­l: local news, profession­al journalism, and a bogus website masqueradi­ng as the real thing.

“I don’t actually want to talk about that because it’s a separate project I’ve got going on,” Moss says as when we ask him to tell us a little more about his involvemen­t with the Kent Chronicle, a supposed news website billing itself as the county’s ‘third largest online news publicatio­n’.

His reticence to delve deeper into the operation is likely to

have something to do with the source of its content - stories lifted in their entirety from other profession­al news-gathering organisati­ons, including KentOnline, and attributed to ‘reporters’ either faked or based on genuine journalist­s whose pictures could be found online. Investigat­ion into the online presence of this seemingly-legitimate outlet soon exposed its links to Laurence Moss and his online activities.

Within minutes of accessing the Kent Chronicle page on Facebook - which has since been removed - a check on the page history revealed that in September its name was changed from ‘Greedy Growth Ads’ to ‘Kent Chronicle’. So could Moss tell us more about his involvemen­t in this project to present to the world a local news service based on

lifting work produced by other news media?

“I designed the website, I don’t get involved in the content distributi­on and whatnot,” he said, as we presented him with evidence of reports lifted in the entirety from KentOnline to the Kent Chronicle.

“I run quite a few different start-ups at the moment, Greedy Growth is what I focus on, I do social media marketing, but obviously I do own other websites and I do get involved in other things, but those things aren’t what I am directly involved in, if that makes sense.

“If you look at that website [Kent Chronicle], I wrote one article myself on mental health last year.

“I definitely will speak to them about that [content taken from KentOnline] because

if that is your content, that shouldn’t be on there and I can get that all taken down and stop that happening.”

“I set up the website, I designed it, I will talk to the guy who does handle that and we can get this taken off immediatel­y because obviously that is not on at all.” Pressed on the identity of the unnamed “partner” who was responsibl­e for the content on the Kent Chronicle site, the teenage entreprene­ur preferred nottosay.

However, since the bogus site was taken down and no longer accessible less than 30 minutes after our conversati­on ended, one must conclude that Moss is exercising significan­t control over the project.

Shortly after, a private message arrived.

“I’ve just taken the website down from my end, and will have a chat to my partner tonight about why it was done in this way in the first place. “Obviously this is not acceptable and I did not wish for this to happen or for any detriment on your end. I do apologise for this and my lack of awareness as to what was going on.” Before the Kent Chronicle site was taken down, we investigat­ed the identities of the supposed reporters who were - to the audience at least - seemingly responsibl­e for the articles published on the site. There were four supposed journalist­s at the Kent Chronicle, whose work attributed to them was actually taken from KentOnline, with national news lifted from HuffPost.

First up is Ella Sutherland, whose title was given as audience content editor, and who covered “the whole county with a focus on what makes Kent unique”.

A basic LinkedIn profile, which has since been deleted, was set up for Ella. Her only experience was given as reporter for the Kent Chronicle since August 2020, with no education or other work listed. The headshot used for junior business reporter Christina Woodhouse on her Kent Chronicle profile could be found across the web.

A company dedicated to making sure women have sanitary hygiene products in their workplace in the UAE had used it on their site.

As had a company where you can design your own business cards. Even Apple had used it to demonstrat­e audio and video conference­s on their iPhones. There were also several LinkedIn profiles using that exact image.

Christina Woodhouse was even more of a ghost that Ella Sutherland. She had no LinkedIn profile and could not be found anywhere else but the Kent Chronicle. She was just a name and a face, dotted across the internet.

The same could be said for Rose Sape, a multimedia journalist who it appeared had written stories focussed on national issues. In fact, at least five of these had been taken from HuffPost, including an exclusive.

The headshot of Rose on the Kent Chronicle website was splashed across the internet; on a site that gave dating advice, a page for a rehab centre, an article about pick-up lines, the list goes on.

Once the picture was credited as being from Pixabay, a site with copyright free images. Rose has no LinkedIn account and no social media profile. It appears the picture of Ben Roching, sports reporter at the Kent Chronicle, is actually of a young journalist based in Scotland, called Iain Leggat. Finally, a LinkedIn profile, which has now been taken down, was also created for Henry Witt, whose title was given as head of partnershi­ps at Kent Chronicle.

The headshot used for Henry can also be seen on an article about testostero­ne as well as other sites.

Clone and bogus news websites such as the Kent Chronicle are on the rise and not going away any time soon, Matt Aspinall, from NLA media access, says.

The NLA is a publisher-owned rights licensing business and works on behalf of the UK’s newspaper and magazine publishers, with a core aim of supporting journalism. Mr Aspinall is head of publisher services at NLA and heads up Text Tracker, a copyright infringeme­nt service. Text Tracker identifies when clients’ articles or websites have been lifted or cloned and then gets NLA working to get it taken down. More regional publishers have joined recently. In 2020 the NLA removed about 20,000 articles across 700 websites and Mr Aspinall suspects there will be more this year.

Speaking about why these sites need to be taken down he said: “It’s stopping others monetising your work, making sure you’re not losing out on ad revenue.”

There is also the frustratio­n when reporters work extremely hard on a story, only for it to be taken and attributed to someone else.

The methods and presentati­on fake sites are becoming more sophistica­ted, he says. He said: “That’s the real problem, it isn’t obvious, that’s why people share these sites. Let’s say it’s called ‘Kent News Today’ or something, for someone who doesn’t follow the news they might see an article and think that’s legitimate.” Some people think if they change an article ever so slightly, perhaps hoping they can get away with taking the story.

Mr Aspinall said: “Major newspapers are finding is their article has been changed every so slightly and the person doing it thinks they aren’t infringing copyright because they are changing it.”

He says even if the article is from a regional site, that won’t stop someone taking it, as they are keen to get hits.”

“They cynically undermine the efforts of real journalist­s who are working to keep the public informed during a time of national crisis...”

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 ??  ?? How the Kent Chronicle site looked, before it was taken down, with stories which earlier appeared on KentOnline
How the Kent Chronicle site looked, before it was taken down, with stories which earlier appeared on KentOnline
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 ??  ?? Laurence Moss, far left, speaks to reporter Rhys Griffiths about Kent Chronicle. Top right: Laurence at work and the types of stories the news website lifted
Laurence Moss, far left, speaks to reporter Rhys Griffiths about Kent Chronicle. Top right: Laurence at work and the types of stories the news website lifted
 ??  ?? Profiles for supposed journalist­s at Kent Chronicle
Profiles for supposed journalist­s at Kent Chronicle

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