The Palm Beach Post

Conspiracy theory is promoted in top-trending video

- By Abby Ohlheiser

Conspiracy theories always arrive after a mass shooting in America. The Parkland school massacre was no different.

On Wednesday morning, a video purporting to support one of those false theories — targeting a teenage survivor of the school shooting that left 17 people dead — was listed as the top trending item on YouTube. As of Wednesday morning, the clip had more than 200,000 views.

The video was simply a news report from the summer before the massacre, in which David Hogg happened to appear. In recent days, Hogg, 17, has become one of the faces of March For Our Lives, the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student initiative responding to the shooting they survived. But a caption that appeared alongside the video’s thumbnail and title on YouTube’s trending page on Wednesday, claimed that the video showed “DAVID HOGG THE ACTOR...”

And that is a clear refer- ence to a viral, false conspiracy theory that Hogg is actually a paid “crisis actor.” The “crisis actor” is a mainstay of any mass shooting false flag theory — basically, the claim is that gun control advocates send in actors to pretend to be victims in order to push for stricter gun laws.

Hogg has denied that he was paid to speak out against guns after one of his former classmates opened fire in his high school. “I’m not a crisis actor,” Hogg told CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Tuesday. “I’m someone who had to witness this and live through this and I continue to be having to do that.”

YouTube has since taken down the video. “This video should never have appeared in Trending,” a spokespers­on said in a written statement to The Washington Post. “Because the video contained footage from an authoritat­ive news source, our system misclassif­ied it. As soon as we became aware of the video, we removed it from Trending and from YouTube for violating our policies. We are working to improve our systems moving forward.”

Despite more than a year of increased scrutiny on the social media companies whose platforms have previously helped conspiracy theories and misinforma­tion to go viral, the Hogg video is evidence that viral falsehoods still benefit from the algorithms that define many of our experience­s online.

The news report was unrelated to the shooting: CBS Los Angeles did a piece in August about an altercatio­n between one of Hogg’s friends and a lifeguard on a California beach. Hogg, who was spending the summer in L.A., filmed the dispute and was interviewe­d about it.

It’s evidence of nothing more than Hogg’s location this summer, and that he sometimes carries around a device with a camera on it. But in the hands of the conspiracy theorists, it became “evidence,” circulated to call into question anything Hogg or his friends said or did. Its popularity on YouTube came from that context, and YouTube’s algorithms were not able to catch it.

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