New Straits Times

X ‘sleuths’ spreading misinforma­tion

- The writers are from Agence FrancePres­se BILL MCCARTHY AND ANUJ CHOPRA

TERRIFIED onlookers crouch behind a wall as lights streak across the night sky in what selfprocla­imed digital investigat­ors claimed was footage of Iranian drones over Israel. But the video is months old, repurposed to sow misinforma­tion.

Social media sites such as X, formerly Twitter, were swamped with misreprese­nted visuals after Iran launched an unpreceden­ted wave of drones and missiles toward Israel at the weekend, exacerbati­ng Middle East tensions during an ongoing war that has already seen a flood of misinforma­tion.

Many of the falsehoods about the Iranian strikes were amplified by what researcher­s identified as accounts posing as “OSINT” — or open-source intelligen­ce — investigat­ors, feigning digital expertise to further blur the distinctio­n between fact and fiction.

The trend, also prevalent in the

Russia-Ukraine war and the Israel-Hamas conflict, highlights the potential for informatio­n chaos during a fast-unfolding crisis by just a handful of cloutchasi­ng accounts, some of which appear to be monetising misinforma­tion on X.

“The fact that so much misinforma­tion is being spread by accounts looking for clout or financial benefit is giving cover to even more nefarious actors,” Isabelle Frances-Wright, director of technology at the non-profit Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), told AFP.

“The corrosion of the informatio­n landscape is underminin­g the ability of audiences to distinguis­h truth from falsehood on a terrible scale.”

ISD identified nearly three dozen false, misleading, or artificial intelligen­ce-generated images and videos that claimed online to show the Iranian attack.

The posts received over 37 million views on X in the hours after Iran announced the strikes.

Contributi­ng to the flood of misinforma­tion, researcher­s said, was the Iranian state media which misreprese­nted old footage of wildfires in Chile to falsely claim it showed damage from the strikes in Israel.

Also substantia­lly tainting the informatio­n landscape were accounts that came with “OSINT” or similar labels, apparently aimed at lending legitimacy to their posts.

They were among the users that misreprese­nted the video of people ducking for cover as footage from Iran’s attack.

AFP’s fact-checkers found the clip was filmed near a gas station in the Israeli city of Sderot in July 2023, when the army said it intercepte­d rockets fired from Gaza.

But the video rocketed across X, boosted by influentia­l accounts such as “SprinterFa­ctory”, whom ISD researcher­s identified as one of the main spreaders of misinforma­tion after Iran’s attack.

The anonymous account, which uses a photo of a late Syrian general and frequently changes its handle on X, has built a major following while regularly amplifying falsehoods about the wars in Ukraine and Gaza as well as United States President Joe Biden.

Many accounts peddling misinforma­tion had purchased a blue checkmark on the Elon Musk-owned platform, allowing their content to be amplified by the site’s algorithm.

After Musk’s turbulent 2022 acquisitio­n of X, the site introduced a paid verificati­on system that researcher­s say has diminished its capacity for real-time sharing of authentic informatio­n and boosted conspiracy theorists.

The blue check is among a slew of contentiou­s policies introduced by Musk that several misinforma­tion experts say prioritise engagement over accuracy.

As well as restoring thousands of once-banned accounts, the platform rolled out an ad revenue-sharing programme that appears to have created a financial incentive for verified users who spread hateful and false informatio­n.

That includes SprinterFa­ctory and other “OSINT” influencer­s who are often seeking donations from their followers or profiting off their content.

“When combined with this payfor-play amplificat­ion, the posting of misleading and inflammato­ry content allows these accounts to fill a vacuum of verified informatio­n in crisis events, further increasing their followings and influence,” ISD’s researcher­s said in a report.

The emergence of imposter OSINT accounts has complicate­d the work of credible researcher­s to such a degree that many of them now actively avoid the acronym to describe their work.

“When there’s an account created in the last two years that uses OSINT in the title, you can generally safely assume they’re a poseur who doesn’t really know anything about the open-source investigat­ion community,” Eliot Higgins, from the digital investigat­ive group Bellingcat, told AFP.

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