The New York Times’ ‘Ways You Can Still Cancel’ Student Loan Debt
After a June 2023 Supreme Court ruling on student debt forgiveness, the New York Times stealth edited an article advising readers that “death” was one way out of debt.
After a June 2023 Supreme Court ruling on student debt forgiveness, the New York Times stealth edited an article advising readers that “death” was one way out of debt.
A Georgia sheriff’s department’s “hilarious” advisory lives on as a meme.
In June 2023, social media posts referenced a purported “virgin birth” involving a crocodile.
An iconic sound effect known as the “Wilhelm scream” was the subject of a popular Imgur post in June 2023.
The ghoulish argument hinges in part on a blog with a history of disinformation aimed at American audiences.
A rapidly changing search landscape led to a satirical tweet (“memento homo”) being presented by Google as a citation for a falsehood in June 2023.
Unpaid moderators have been protesting a price hike against third-party developers.
After a June 2023 conflict between Russia and Wagner Group mercenaries, social media posts claimed leader Yevgeniy Prighozin was “under felony indictment” in the United States.
“NASA saying no internet” spiked in searches in June 2023 amid rumors of an “internet apocalypse.”
A leaked recording from a classroom has fueled an yet another imported (and already thoroughly debunked) strain of disinformation.