Following days of protest decrying the actions of Immigration and father and daughter sex partners videoCustoms Enforcement (ICE) and militarized federal forces in Los Angeles, downtown L.A. residents remained under curfew this week while California governor Gavin Newsom went toe-to-toe with President Trump, who sent Marines into the area. Memes, and viral misinformation, were abundant.
Meanwhile, the "No Kings" organizing coalition has planned thousands more peaceful demonstrations this weekend, specifically orchestrated to overlap with Trump's planned military parade. While the organizations behind the events are gearing up for what they've said will be the "largest single-day, peaceful protest" in the country's history, some worry they may be met with an equal show of state-sanctioned violence — and attempts to undermine news coverage via viral falsehoods.
SEE ALSO: U.S. government climate website axes staff, may shut downPeter Adams, senior vice president of research and design for the News Literacy Project, explained that mass demonstrations are rife for online misinformation, patterns which can be spotted before protesters even touch ground. Adams runs the organization's online misinformation newsletter RumorGuard, which collates viral fact-checks and critical literacy tips.
"Protests generally only happen around events that are highly polarizing and controversial," said Adams. "The more polarizing something is, the more people's political identities are activated and invoked. We know that these identities play a very strong role in how people react to information online. As polarization has increased in American society, this is even more at play."
News and misinformation debunking organizations, such as bipartisan NewsGuard, have reputed dozens of false posts, including those made by conservative commentators alleging Newsom had posted an outdated or AI-generated photo of national guard troopsas he criticized Trump's militarized protest response. Such posts were propelled by X chatbot Grok, which told some users that the photos, first published by the San Francisco Chronicle, were outdated — ChatGPT users got similarly confusing responses.
Others, including representatives of the Trump administration, fanned the flames with misattributed or outrightly false quotes from federal and international leaders, including California congresswoman Maxine Watersand Mexican president Claudia Scheinbaum. Viral posts from partisan voices on both sides of the conflict have attempted to sway, or overtly manipulate, public perception and recast reality in terms that are more favorable to their side, Adams explains.
"Viral misinformation expresses patterns over time, and we can learn how to recognize those patterns and inoculate ourselves to a whole swath of viral rumors," explained Adams.
As protests continue, here's what to look out for:
"Chatbots often generate outdated or inaccurate details, and that can be especially true during fast-moving events," explained Adams and other News Literacy Project experts. While users are turning to built-in chatbots to fact-checkon platforms that have removed internal fact-checking programs, AI-powered assistants are increasingly unreliable sources for news.
Despite its convenience, "AI is really prone to making big errors, and to integrating details from low quality sources alongside high quality sources, sanitizing them and presenting falsehoods alongside facts that makes it harder for people to parse," said Adams. "Don't turn to generative AI to ask whether something is true and take it at its word."
Nearly every mass demonstration is met with accusations that at least some of its participants were hired to be on the ground, according to the News Literacy Project. On June 10, for example, a fake Craigslist adcirculated on social media claiming to seek “the toughest badasses in the city” for a $6,500 to $12,500 payout to attend the L.A. demonstrations.
Online pranks or "troll" behavior may exacerbate the spread of such rumors. It's easier than ever to fake a screenshot from a user or official accounts, said Adams, and the fact that many public officials and agencies have started to lean into ironic posting only exacerbates public confusion about which posts are authentic.
Allegations that protestors have staged piles of bricks or other objects ahead of time to help violent protestors is a "recurring hoax" surrounding mass demonstrations, the organization explains.
During last week's protests, which led to combative encounters with police and the destruction of property, some online alleged the effort was organized, including placing bricks in strategic areas; the posts misleadingly included images from construction projects in New Jersey and Malaysia.
Coverage of mass protests is also frequently drowned out by unrelated footage circulated online for virality or to inflame a specific response to the events (the same is often true during severe weather disasters). Videos from the wave of protests following the 2020 murder of George Floyd, for example, made the rounds following the Los Angeles demonstrations on June 8.
"Sharing out-of-context footage is one of the most common tricks used to spread falsehoods," said the organization.
More recently, hyperrealistic footage from video gameshave been shared as real world events and news. Generative AI may also complicate an individual's ability to discern reality from fiction.
Individuals may fall victim to fake or ironic posts mistakenly shared as real news, or what Adams calls a "stolen satire" phenomenon, as brands and online trolls take advantage of a confusing information environment. Generally, the rise of news influencers, live streamers, and people claiming to be "citizen journalists"— now more frequently on the ground at protests — feed into ongoing partisan attempts to discredit the intent and veracity of standards-based news sources, says Adams.
"We get into a territory where no one can agree what is real, and that is an environment in which democracy cannot flourish," he said. "Be aware of your emotions. Be wary of user-generated content and unknown sources. Always stop and verify you're not amplifying anything you're not confident is true."
Topics Activism Social Good Social Media Politics
Romantic student's public declaration of love literally goes up in smokeMartian dust devil swallows another in rare videoAlphabet's selfLocal Santa tells story of terminal 5Finally there's proof that Britain's 4G is as bad as you thoughtWatch LeBron James geek out to Kendrick Lamar in an utterly lifeless crowdNo more hazing MLB rookies by making them dress as womenApple Watch update delayed after reports of bricked devicesJill Stein wants moral high ground after cashing in on Trump fearSnowden tells Twitter CEO hate speech can be countered with 'more speech'Disney CEO says 'Rogue One' is not political, many on Twitter disagreeGoogle reportedly scales down its selfApple's BeatsX wireless earphones delayed until February 2017No more hazing MLB rookies by making them dress as womenOculus CEO Brendan Iribe steps down, leaving Facebook's VR future uncertainOne dad was so confused by 'Pokémon Go' he made a short film about itPlume is turboStudent's NSFW photo series puts Trump's gross words on women's bodiesHundreds of tech workers pledge to fight a Muslim registryPeople are using Kanye West lyrics to diss Kanye West in the wake of his Trump Tower visit CEO Sundar Pichai recalls Google job interview, 'I thought Gmail was a joke' Sundar Pichai recollects college romance during visit to his Alma Mater Basslet's wearable subwoofer lets you feel the bass in your body Even people with old PCs can play top games with Nvidia's new streaming service Next wave of cheap smartphones should cost $30: Google CEO Sundar Pichai Dolphins escape from Japanese town made famous by 'The Cove' Google CEO: India is a 'quick Xiaomi shows off a new, super The people taking Trump’s secretary of state pick to court aren’t who you’d expect Sony built a giant 4K projector for reading magazines Razer's new ridiculous laptop has three built Could 2017 be the year people take universal basic income seriously? Amazon launches 'Business' service in India to target enterprise customers Here's when Intel's standalone wireless VR headset will arrive Kim Kardashian's selfies have returned to bring peace on Earth 'Charmed' could be coming back to TV, but don't freak out yet Your lazy self can now order takeout by just yelling at Alexa Pregnant woman shares touching moment with orangutan at zoo How ground The ad block apocalypse didn't arrive and doesn't look like it's going to
1.455s , 10546.3203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【father and daughter sex partners video】,New Knowledge Information Network