Can Ultraviolet Light Be Injected Into the Body to Fight COVID-19?
Social media users cited an “alternative health” practice to defend United States President Donald Trump.
Social media users cited an “alternative health” practice to defend United States President Donald Trump.
Social media users mocking a far-right protester didn’t catch the changes to the photograph of her sign.
An unknown party took advantage of the rumors surrounding the North Korean leader’s status to spread disinformation.
A tweet from pundit Bill Mitchell asserted that COVID-19 was no big deal compared to H1N1, but he included questionable figures about infection and mortality rates to make his point.
A purported photograph of “canine coronavirus vaccine from 2001” keeps recirculating — let’s talk about what “novel coronavirus” actually means.
A purported video from a White House coronavirus briefing has social media chattering, but the footage is obviously not evidence of any COVID-19 conspiracies.
Alongside comments that Trump has “a tweet for everything,” a screenshot purportedly shows his criticism of former United States President Barack Obama’s handling of a pandemic in November 2009.
An overstated claim by a new Twitter account issued without citations was still shared widely on the website.
Low-information social media users made light of a man’s death to try and insult “the media.”
“Alternative health” advocate Joseph Mercola admits he doesn’t have evidence supporting his claim.