Feds Arrest James Comey From His Home at 3 AM-Fiction!
A self-described fake news website is behind false reports that the feds arrested Jim Comey at 3 a.m.
A self-described fake news website is behind false reports that the feds arrested Jim Comey at 3 a.m.
A Verizon backpack giveaway being held in July 2017 generated a lot of questions among social media users interested in claiming their bag.
A website that publishes “works of satirical fiction” is behind false reports that Nancy Pelosi’s daughters were arrested for smuggling cocaine.
A warning not to accept a friend request from John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt is a joke that plays on similar warnings that have gone viral.
A doctored photo of a wolf spider has been misidentified as a Florida cane spider, a Hawaiian cane spider in 2015, and as a Angolan witch spider in 2013.
Scientific data casts serious doubt on claims that CLA safflower oil promotes weight loss and helps break down belly fat.
A false report of a Yellowstone lava geyser following earthquakes in Montana and Wyoming in July 2017 were intended to be satire.
False warnings not to accept friend requests from hacker Jayden K. Smith because will gain access to all your friends’ accounts surfaced in July 2017.
False claims that Delta Airlines was giving away free tickets from July 2017 were part of a survey scam and should not be trusted.
Malia Obama was not fired from an internship at the Spanish Embassy in June 2017 — her internship was scheduled to end a year earlier, in 2016.