6 Aug 2012

The man behind the Twitter death rumours

 RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT CONFIRMS: BASHAR AL ASSAD, PRESIDENT OF SYRIA, HAS BEEN KILLED TODAY IN LATAKYJA WITH HIS WIFE AND TWO PEOPLE.


The account wrote several tweets of a similar nature reporting the death of President al-Assad of Syria. The updates were retweeted thousands of times and lots of people took the apparently absurd rumour seriously. Part of the reason for that was the fact that the account had thousands of followers and was created on the 21st of March 2012. Also, the account had several credible Twitter followers.

The reason for that, it turns out, is that this is an account that had been used several times in the past to spread death rumours about famous people. The list includes in addition to al-Assad, Gabriel Garcìa Màrquez, Nelson Mandela, Hosni Mubarak, and Francis Ford Coppola among others. With each rumour, the account gets more followers, then its owner deletes all the old tweets and starts anew, creating a new identity. This page keeps a record of the old tweets even if they are deleted.

Later in the day, the account tweeted 'This account is an hoax created by italian (sic) journalist Tomasso De Benedetti'. If it's indeed De Benedetti, it makes sense because of his previous hoaxes. He had a point to prove about media gullibility but I'm getting sick of his hoaxes. Let's make sure he can't use that account at least. So check next time you hear a rumour.  

2 comments:

  1. An official account would
    a) never look that unprofessional without state coat of arms
    b) will call the official by name
    c) will never use only uppercase

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. exactly, which is why I find it so crazy that some people actually believe it.

      Delete

Karl reMarks is a blog about Middle East politics and culture with a healthy dose of satire.

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