Thread: You may have seen viral posts that Olena Zelenska, President Zelensky's wife, spent $1.1m on Cartier jewellery during the couple's recent visit to the US.
Let's find out why those posts are false, and examine how pro-Kremlin disinformation of this kind travels online.
The claim first appeared in a 30 September YouTube video by an obscure channel.
In a series of Instagram stories, a woman claims to be a former Cartier employee, who was apparently sacked because Zelenska didn't like her. She then unveils a $1.1m receipt in Zelenska's name.
The alleged former Cartier employee's Instagram appears to be ".jeanette".
Head over to Instagram and you'll see the account has no posts, no followers, and no following. That should immediately make you suspicious. gorgeous.bb
Now let's examine the receipt, which is likely doctored. It's dated 22 September at Cartier's Fifth Avenue store in New York.
Zelenska couldn't possibly have bought jewellery in New York on 22 September, because she'd landed in Canada on the 21st and spent the 22nd in Ottawa.
That alleged employee video then becomes the source for a story on the Nigerian website The Nation, which has been widely shared by pro-Kremlin users.
Apart from the issues with the video and receipt, the Nation's story, as pointed out by @DavidPuente, is a sponsored post.
You'd have thought if Zelenska had been spotted at Cartier on New York's Fifth Avenue, we'd have seen images or videos of it posted somewhere, or that US outlets would have got the story ahead of a Nigerian website, a dormant Instagram account and an obscure YouTube channel.
Despite clear evidence that the story is false, it's gone viral on Telegram, Twitter, TikTok and other platforms.
Some tweets with the claim have now got Community Notes, but I wonder how many of those who saw the initial claim on major platforms now know that it's false.
The reason I'm highlighting this is that there's been an uptick in recent months in false yet viral claims that Zelensky and senior Ukrainian officials are using Western aid to enrich themselves, nearly all of which follow a similar pattern in how they reach millions online.
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Thread: Online misinformation is rampant following the escalation of violence between Israel and Hamas today.
This video of a tower block in Gaza being hit by a missile is from May 2021, not today. It was captured live during a BBC Arabic broadcast at the time.
This video of a house in Gaza being destroyed by a strike is genuine, but it's actually from May of this year, and not from the fresh escalation in hostilities today.
This video of a house being struck by Israel is also from May of this year, not today.
It was filmed in Beit Hanoun, Gaza; as geolocated by @ChrisOsieck at the time.
Thread: Viral misinformation about the French riots
This video of several cars falling from a multi-storey car park is from the set of the action film Fast & Furious 8, and unrelated to the current French riots.
It was filmed in 2016 on Prospect Avenue East in Cleveland, Ohio.
This viral image, shared on Twitter and Instagram, falsely claims to show French protesters capturing a police van.
The image is from the set of the 2022 French film Athena. A video of the scene can be found on YouTube.
Community Notes have been added to some Twitter posts.
A headline claiming French protesters are targeting police with US rifles smuggled out of Ukraine has been shared on Telegram and Twitter by pro-Kremlin users.
There's no evidence for the claim. The image is taken from a 2022 workshop for trophy hunters in Hauts-de-France.
As the unprecedented infighting between Wagner and the Russian military escalates, expect false and misleading claims to appear online.
There's currently no evidence of Belarusian President Lukashenko boarding a private jet or Russian officials fleeing Moscow.
I'll be compiling viral misinformation, including videos, images and online claims, about the armed mutiny involving the Wagner group and the Russian military in this thread.
Please flag any suspicious claims you see via DM (open) or email (in my bio).
Seeing plenty of evidence-free claims about the CIA or Nato having organised the mutiny in Russia.
The rift between Wagner's head Prigozhin and Russian Defence Minister Shoigu about the invasion of Ukraine is well-documented, and has been intensifying for months.
THREAD: a collection of fake Twitter accounts after the removal of legacy verification
A fake account with Blue subscription posing as Sudan's Rapid Support Forces, currently involved in a conflict, falsely claimed the death of its leader Mohamed Dagalo, getting 1.7M views.
Several fake accounts are posing as New York Mayor Eric Adams.
@NYCMayor is the genuine personal account of Eric Adams. The rest are all fake.
A fake account impersonating Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot has just been suspended by Twitter.
The fake account simply added another "s" to Lightfoot's official handle @chicagosmayor.