More than 44,000 tweets in less than 48 hours for this new piece of "research" by the QAnon crowd. A tweet on 8 July seems to have started this bizarre claim that @Wayfair engages in child "sex trafficking" because some of its products are named after missing children
Once again, exclude retweets and the number of unique accounts pushing this drops from 20,000 to just 5,000 as 80% of the traffic is being driven by retweets. "Human trafficking" and "rabbit hole" also frequently appearing in the content. How big is the QAnon crowd in real world?
All the big tweets are from today. And once again, like #TakeTheOath, California and Texas seem to be hotspot states for QAnon content
This is going absolutely wild on Facebook too, where there are dozens and dozens of QAnon-dedicated pages and groups with hundreds of thousands of memebrs where this type of content can be shared with a huge audience
Here's the biggest Facebook post about Wayfair I can find, which has been shared 14,000 times. Plot twist, the user who posted it later says in an update that one of the kids has been found. "Doesn't mean this ain't happening. That's what they want you to think," he says...
Oh, look. One of the girls who was meant to have been "trafficked" by Wayfair has popped up on Facebook live to say she's read all this nonsense being shared about her and has had enough
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While Elon Musk recommends sending around X posts so people can "learn the truth", here's a thread of viral misinformation on X about Hurricane Milton.
Alex Jones baselessly claims hurricanes Milton and Helene were deliberately started by the US government as "weather weapons".
This post by one of X's most prominent conspiracy theorists, viewed 4.8 million times, suggests without any evidence that Hurricane Milton is a result of geo-engineering.
Conspiracy theorist Stew Peters claims Hurricane Milton was pre-planned to directly hit Tampa Bay, in a post viewed 4 million times.
Obviously, Hurricane Milton is not pre-planned. No-one can plan to create hurricanes.
A Russia-based disinformation network run by a former Florida cop has published a new fabricated story on a fake news website called "Seattle Tribune".
It baselessly claims Ukrainain President Zelensky has secretly purchased a Mercedes 770 used by Hitler. It's nonsense.
The story refers to this doctored picture of a Mercedes 770 near the presidential office in Kyiv, posted on Telegram.
But that Telegram channel has never posted the pic, and the Mercedes in it has been lifted from the image on the right. Note the same reflections on both cars.
As is often the case with the network of fake news websites posing as local news outlets run by Moscow-based John Mark Dougan, the "Seattle Tribune" website was set up only five days ago, specifically to post this fake story.
There's no record of such a news outlet in Seattle.
Immediately after the Southport attack, baseless rumours began spreading online.
The main source of rumours has been a report by an obscure US "news" website that falsely claims the suspect is an "asylum seeker" named "Ali Al-Shakati", who "arrived in the UK by boat last year".
Merseyside Police has confirmed that the suspect was born in Cardiff, and has yet to identify the 17-year-old.
The report also adds that the suspect was "on MI6 watch list", despite the fact that it is MI5, not MI6, that deals with domestic counter-terrorism cases.
The name "Ali Al-Shakati" has since been widely shared online in misleading posts viewed by millions.
Some other outlets, including Russia's RT news channel, have also reported this name, citing the US-based website.
Pro-Kremlin influencers claim the captain of the Dali ship is a Ukrainian.
But online records show a Ukrainian man was the Dali's captain from March to July 2016. The ship that hit the bridge reportedly had an all-Indian crew.
Claims by influencers such as Alex Jones and Andrew Tate that the Baltimore Bridge collapsed due to a "cyber-attack" have been viewed millions of times.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore has said the early investigation points to an accident, with "no evidence of a terrorist attack".
This video, viewed 1.4 million times, claims to show evidence of pre-installed explosives causing the Baltimore Bridge collapse.
What the video shows is not explosives, but most likely electrical wires catching sparks.