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Viral WhatsApp Hoaxes Are India’s Own Fake News Crisis

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  • And they find Modi everywhere! During rally of Dr Kumar Vishwas, there was a photo of a flower somewhere in the background. That was changed by the social media team of the BJP and captioned as that of Modi's photo! In a way, they stated that the photo of the AAP rally was photoshopped and the crowd was originally from a BJP rally!

  • Find boozers, give them a virtual AAP cap!
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A group of kids is drinking. Now, photoshop experts gave them AAP caps. Too bad AAP team dug out the original photo.

  • Arvind Kejriwal is a rape accussed
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Arvind Kejriwal accused of RAPE during IIT days? Fake Telegraph newspaper clipping about Delhi CM goes viral on WhatsApp!



"AAP received funds from Ford Foundation."
Reality: AAP didn't receive any funds from Ford Foundation. It was Gujarat under Modi which did.

"map on AAP's *official* website has given Kashmir to Pakistan" - Modi said in his speech.

Reality: Map on AAP's official website showed complete Kashmir as part of India. It's BJP's website which showed entire Kashmir as disputed.


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As on 18 Apr 2016 total number of electrified villages during 2014-2016 was 1529.


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Which reduced to 1321 within one day as on 19th April 2016.

And BJP call it electrification.

At such a rate, I wonder how long will IT wing take to show complete blackout in whole India?

Hera feri specialists BJP?

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The most famous:

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PIB = GOI which is involved in it.
It means Modi himself is involved in this treachery.
He did not fire any Press Information Bureau man who did it.

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Adobe Photoshop forecasts a drop in revenue after Lok Sabha election comes to an end

Bangalore. Adobe India predicted in its annual general meeting a speculated drop in the revenue, largely due to the ending of canvassing for the 2014 Lok Sabha Elections.

“The market really picked up in last couple of years as Photoshop has been used widely across political parties to portray what they promise to do if they win and what the other parties did when they won,” said Adobe’s country manager for Indian operations Mr Gullible.

LOL bhai LOL

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How Modi fooled his own Gujaratis with Melborne picture:

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By January, Modi's cyber-army is scripting an architecture that would ensure that his likes on Facebook and followers on Twitter cross Obama's score — 3.64 crore 'likes' on Facebook and 3.45 crore followers on Twitter.

Modi has paid/fake followers:



Narendra Modi eyes Obama in battle for cyber world

BJP’s online warriors listen to critics carefully - Hindustan Times

After Mukesh Ambani bought HT with banks money (5K crores) the above article has been deleted.

Modi’s Operandi | Rana Ayyub | Tehelka.com

The Social Media Massacre By Team Modi

Get me 48 lakh social media ids: Modi tells BJP's Maharashtra unit
http://www.firstpost.com/politics/g...-modi-tells-bjps-maharashtra-unit-910921.html

How IT companies are using Facebook, Twitter to malign rivals: Cobrapost expose




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Suphan Buri is in Thailand.
BJPian Bhakts are trolling Kejriwal from Thailand too.

See that?

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Comments using the phrase 50 cent army about the Chinese are banned here. Please do not imitate that cheap jab by coining a similar phrase. We can disagree without getting into the gutter and brawling.

I have seen enough Indian posters using "50 cent" freely without any punishment. I am sure you have seen those too.
 
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By your standard, I could have dished out 20+ negatives a night had I had the privilege you are enjoying. :partay:

This is not the first time, and it will not be the last time: please point out offenders to me, and they will get rated.
 
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This is not the first time, and it will not be the last time: please point out offenders to me, and they will get rated.
haha didnt u got demoted as a result of abusing your rank, dishing out negatives to chinese n pakistani members like cookies to puppies b4?
 
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haha didnt u got demoted as a result of abusing your rank, dishing out negatives to chinese n pakistani members like cookies to puppies b4?

Of course. That explains the blanks in my memory; I was lobotomised.
 
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Of course. That explains the blanks in my memory; I was lobotomised.

oh wait i got confused, that's another guy callled milspec.





ya n u gave me a negative rating, just for a simple '5 rupees army' sentence.

hope u r coping fine with menopause.

thx.
 
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https://www.buzzfeed.com/pranavdixi...ke-news-crisis?utm_term=.cs11lwM4J#.ay2pLNAY4

Viral WhatsApp Hoaxes Are India’s Own Fake News Crisis

Misinformation and political propaganda in the world’s largest democracy often go undetected — until they have brutal real-world impact.

Posted on January 20, 2017, at 1:17 a.m.

Pranav Dixit

BuzzFeed News Reporter

At 8 p.m. on Nov. 8, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi unexpectedly banned 86% of the country’s legal tender from circulation. The goal was to wipe out “black money” — a term used in India for cash that’s stashed outside the banking system to evade taxes. Old notes of Rs. 500 and Rs. 1,000 would no longer be legal. Instead, the government would issue new, redesigned Rs. 2,000 notes.

Hours after the prime ministerial bombshell, the rumors started flying fast and thick over WhatsApp, the Facebook-owned instant messaging app used by more than 160 million Indians: The new notes would include an embedded GPS chip that would allow the government to track down hoarders.


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Nisha Singh #HDL@Nisha__Hindu
★ All now 500 & 2000 notes will have NGC - Nano GPS Chips installed. Satellite will track accumulation of all notes around the world. ★

05:03 PM - 08 Nov 2016
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Soon a video purporting to show one of these GPS notes being tracked on Google Maps went viral on WhatsApp, and then Facebook. And  less than 24 hours after the rumor started ,  Zee News, a leading Hindi television news channel, ran a 90-second report about the high-tech note, leading the country’s reserve bank to finally debunk it.

The United States is currently experiencing a fake news crisis — bogus news articles disguised to look like real ones to mislead people, influence public opinion, and/or to simply use their massive reach to reap advertising profits. These operations are sophisticated, data-driven, and highly targeted. But in countries like India where internet penetration and literacy still lag far behind the US, misinformation tends to have a more grassroots quality. Twitter is a fertile ground for all kinds of rumormongering, but with just over 30 million users in the country, its impact is limited.


"Our problem is WhatsApp, because it’s fast, simple, and much more intimate compared to Facebook."

The primary vector for the spread of misinformation in India is WhatApp. The instant messenger is fast, free, and runs on nearly all of India’s 300 million smartphones. It’s also encrypted end-to-end, which means it’s nearly impossible to track what flows through it. Its real-world ramifications, nonetheless, can be brutal.

In November, WhatsApp rumors of a salt shortage sparked panic in at least four Indian states and caused stampedes outside grocery shops as people rushed to stock up. The government eventually debunked the rumours — but not before a woman died.

A Different Kind of Fake News
India’s misinformation problem predates the internet. In the early ‘90s, rabble-rousers in northern India trying to stir up tensions in Hindu and Muslim communities would mass-produce cassette recordings full of fake gunfire, screams, and chants of “Allah-ho-Akbar,” and then play them in car stereos at full volume in the dead of the night to incite communal violence.

And once the internet and social media came to the country, hoaxes took on a life of their own. In 2008, Pepsi was forced to publicly rebut a video that claimed that its Indian subsidiary manufactured Kurkure — Indian Cheetos — out of plastic. A few years later, makers of Frooti, a popular mango drink, started offering guided tours of their facilities after a rumour about the beverage containing HIV-positive blood went viral. In 2015, Mumbai’s police commissioner set up a hotline for anxious parents and urged people to ignore WhatsApp rumors that claimed that gangs of women were kidnapping school children.

“I think it’s unfair to draw a direct parallel between the kind of organized fake news industry we saw in the lead up to the US elections and what happens in India,” said the social media strategist of a prominent political party in Delhi who did not wish to be named. “Our problem is WhatsApp, because it’s fast, simple, and much more intimate compared to Facebook. There’s more incentive for perpetrators of misinformation in India to distribute it over WhatsApp than Facebook because the chances of having real-world impact through WhatsApp are higher.”

What is also a disincentive is how little average revenue each Indian user generates for Facebook annually, despite the fact that the country is Facebook’s largest market outside the United States. According to the company’s own numbers, each user in the Asia-Pacific region generates less than $8 annually, compared to a US user who generates $62. That makes India a less attractive target for people like teens in Macedonia, for instance, who earned thousands of dollars in advertising revenue peddling pro-Trump fake stories on Facebook to millions of Americans.

A Nationalist Wave

"There's been a sharp increase in WhatsApp forwards that are just propaganda."

In 2014, Narendra Modi, a right-wing politician known for his close ties to Hindu supremacist group RSS, won by a landslide to become the prime minister of India. Like Trump, Modi is a polarizing figure — and his rise to power birthed thousands of social media trolls and organized misinformation campaigns.

“Everything changed,” said author Rupa Gulab, an outspoken Modi critic. “The hoaxes that went viral a few years before were just silly, but with Modi and his fanatics, there’s been a sharp increase in the amount of WhatsApp forwards you receive that are just propaganda.”

The build-up started while Modi was still campaigning in 2014. In January that year, a quote about Modi attributed to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange went viral on Twitter, WhatsApp, and Facebook, boosted by shares from members of Modi’s party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).



Follow
Priti Gandhi

✔@MrsGandhi

Narendra Modi for Prime Minister!! "@PreetamV: https://twitter.com/PreetamV/status/427102983164153857/photo/1pic.twitter.com/dZabXcVEbj "

12:34 AM - Jan 26, 2014
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WikiLeaks denied the quote.



Follow
WikiLeaks

✔@wikileaks

Narenda Modi's #BJP has been pushing this fake #Modiendorsement http://fekle.in/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/assange-modi.jpg … - but #Assange has never said anything about #Modi

2:13 AM - Mar 17, 2014
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That didn’t stop the wave of Modi-related forwards on WhatsApp.

In October 2015, a photo of Modi sweeping the floor “during an RSS rally in 1988”  —  an attempt to highlight the prime minister’s humble roots  —  blew up. Later it became clear the image was photoshopped.


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A photo of Modi sweeping the floor “during an RSS rally in 1988” (left) was found to be photoshopped from the original picture (right) in 2015.

Last year, India’s Press Information Bureau, an agency that manages government communication with the media, was left red-faced after it published a photoshopped picture of the prime minister looking out on a flooded town in the flood-hit state of Tamil Nadu via its official Twitter handle. A new hashtag, #PhotoshopSarkar  —  photoshop government  —  was born.



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Susegad Goan @SusegadGoan

.@PIB_India Has now deleted the tweet with the photoshopped pic...

10:47 PM - Dec 3, 2015
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And in August, Modi himself had to debunk a viral story that claimed he had urged citizens to boycott Chinese-made firecrackers.


View image on Twitter
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PMO India

✔@PMOIndia

Few appeals with PM’s ‘signature’ are circulated on social media. Such documents are not authentic.

6:26 PM - Aug 31, 2016
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More recently, in a thread that went viral, Twitter user @samjawed65 deconstructed how an uncorroborated pro-government report in a mainstream Indian publication ended up in an aggregation echo chamber with half a dozen other media outlets re-reporting it, until the Huffington Post finally debunked it as fake news.

A recently published book details how the BJP deliberately created abusive social media campaigns using both WhatsApp and Twitter to troll prominent Indians and spread lies.

“[It’s clear] how seriously the political Hindu Right in India takes the online space as an ideological battlefield,” Rohit Chopra, a media studies professor at Santa Clara University who is working on a book about Hindu nationalism and new media, told BuzzFeed News. “They have invested money in it, they have mechanisms for flooding platforms like Twitter with messages either promoting their view or attacking contrary views, and they seem to employ a significant number of people in different capacities to manage this space.”

Krishna Prasad, former editor-in-chief of Indian news weekly Outlook, agreed. Once, Prasad recalled, a social media strategist asked him during a meeting with BJP politicians, “What have you gotten to trend on Twitter today?” “There are clearly people in India’s political parties buying hashtags and trying to influence trending topics,” he said.

“Individuals trying to influence trending topics are considered spammers and may have their accounts temporarily or permanently suspended,” a Twitter spokesperson said, and pointed to Twitter’s page that outlines rules for trending topics.

Dark Social
In November, local newspapers reported that a doctor in the eastern state of Bihar had died of a cardiac arrest after income tax officials raided his house and seized illegal currency — except it wasn’t true. The rumors had first spread on WhatsApp before trickling up to the local media that ran the story without verification. Eventually, the doctor had to call a press conference to declare he was still alive and there had be no raid.


WhatsApp groups are the connective tissue that bind most Indians.

India is the number one market for WhatsApp in the world. The instant messenger is the most popular messaging platform, connecting everyone from school friends to India’s bureaucrats. WhatsApp groups are the connective tissue that bind most Indians — but they are also notorious for being hotbeds of spammy forwards and hoaxes.

“Most Indians belong to tight-knit groups on WhatsApp such as a friends group and a family group,” said Harsh Taneja, an assistant professor at the Missouri School of Journalism whose research focuses on audience behaviour and internet use. “But digital networks like WhatsApp are designed to connect us tightly with groups of acquaintances too, who we may not otherwise have interacted with frequently.”

These “weak ties”, as Taneja calls them, are the reason why information spreads rapidly on closed networks like WhatsApp. “Most misinformation that originates within WhatsApp finds its way through this tight-knit network of weak ties,” Taneja said. But it’s tough to analyze WhatsApp. The messaging platform is encrypted end-to-end with no API, algorithms, or trending topics  — which means that it’s virtually impossible to track exactly how content spreads through it.

A spokesperson at the Hindu Sena, a Hindu nationalist party that celebrated Donald Trump’s victory in Delhi in December, told BuzzFeed News that he is a part of more than 50 right-wing WhatsApp groups, and sends “thousands of WhatsApp forwards around the country every day.”

Last year, police in different Indian states arrested half a dozen admins of WhatsApp groups, charging them with the crime of spreading misleading information, even though an admin has no control over what other members post in a group they belong to.


"We need to ask tough questions of Facebook, Twitter and Google in an Indian context."

Other times, Indian authorities have resorted the using the bluntest weapon possible: turning off mobile internet entirely. In the first nine months of 2016, the Indian government turned off the internet 22 times in various parts of the country — including a four-month stretch in violence-ridden Kashmir — simply to prevent rumors from spreading over WhatsApp.

“We need to ask tough questions of Facebook, Twitter, and Google in an Indian context, just like they are being brought to book in America,” said Prasad. “In a country like India that is so diverse and culturally different from the US, these companies cannot get away with saying that we are just platforms any longer.”

Facebook declined to comment on WhatsApp in the context of fake news. A Facebook spokesperson instead directed BuzzFeed News to CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s post on the topic. “We’ve made significant progress,” it says. “But there is more work to be done.”
And fake news coming from India claiming victory after unilaterally retreating and given up the entire Donglang region to China
 
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And fake news coming from India claiming victory after unilaterally retreating and given up the entire Donglang region to China
fake news propaganda is a speciality n art by itself.


fake news in politics, fake news in society, fake news in social media, fake news in sports news, fake news technology news, fake news in economic news- even fake news in bollywood.

http://www.fakingnews.firstpost.com/

hahahahhaahahahahahahhaa.

And fake news coming from India claiming victory after unilaterally retreating and given up the entire Donglang region to China
That's not all:

https://www.thequint.com/news/world/fake-news-alert-rohingyas-are-not-killing-hindus-in-rakhine

Fake News Being Used to Incite Anger Against Rohingyas in India

Shorbori Purkayastha
Updated: 9 September, 2017 6:16 PM IST

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On further search three of those images appear to be from Bangladesh and only one from Rakhine.

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(Photo: Altered by The Quint)
The first image, which is of a defaced Hindu idol has a blurred caption. At a closer look, the caption reads in Bengali, “Jhalokathi’s Hindu family attacked, temple’s idols defaced by Jubo League leader and his supporters.”

A quick search on google will show that Jhalokathi is a district in south-western Bangladesh, and that the Bangladeshi Swami Jubo League is commonly known as the Jubo league.

The source of the photo cannot be traced to any news report, but in a post from 2014, on a blog for Hindus in Bangladesh called Hindu Samhati Global Media.

Also Read: The Ultimate Fake News TV Show Is Here: Don’t Become a WebQoof!

The second image first appeared on ‘Ekhon’, a lesser known news website from Bangladesh. The said image appeared on a report on 22 November 2016, about the killings of Rohingyas in Rakhine, unlike what the original tweet says.

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(Photo: Altered by The Quint)
The third photo was also traced back to 2016, in a report from the Fatikchari region of Chittagong in Bangladesh in a Bengali new website called Eibela. Fatikchari and Rakhine, as we know, are thousands of kilometers apart, hence cannot be confused with each other.

The report is on an 18-year-old Hindu boy who was murdered on his way back home.
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(Photo: Altered by The Quint)
Also Read: Delhi Police Debunks Rumours of Closed Schools, Traffic Diversions

And finally, the last photo of a Hindu woman crying on the site of her house that was set ablaze by miscreants is from Nilfamari, also in Bangladesh. Three people were arrested after the incident. A report from the incident that took place in 2014, can be read at Kaler Kontho — a Bangladeshi news website.

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The fake news shared from Sai Deepak J’s twitter account was retweeted 197 times. In fact, there are a number of anti-Rohingya and anti-Islamic posts supported by fake news, that has been tweeted from this account.

Additionally, the account has retweeted fake news from other accounts that post unverified news regularly, creating a web of vengeful reports against certain communities.

Take the case of a retweet from KashmiriPandits News that claims “Islamic Rohingya Terrorist burned down many #Buddhist Temples in Burma. (sic)”

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(Photo: Altered by The Quint)
Muslims had indeed torched at least four Buddhist shrines, but in Bangladesh’s Cox Bazaar. The three photos were published by Reuters in 2012, in a report that stated that “Muslims took to the streets in the area late on Saturday to protest against what they said was a photograph posted on Facebook that insulted Islam.”

The “insulting” photo was allegedly posted by a Buddhist, hence a group of protesters “marched to Buddhist villages and set fire to temples and houses.”
Far from what the tweets suggest, it appears Rohingyas are not the only ones fleeing Myanmar. A PTI report from 4 September 2017 stated that around 500 Hindus have fled the troubled region to Bangladesh’s Cox Bazaar.

Bangladesh Hindu-Buddhist-Christian Oikya Parishad's General Secretary, Advocate Rana Das Gupta, said that the Hindu refugees from Myanmar claimed that there was “86 Hindus among the dead in Rakhine.”
 
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Heck, two foreigners wanting Indians to not to vote for Modi again. We know what it means. LOL!!!!

Poor things, more they rub Modi more bigger he will become. :bunny:
 
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Heck, two foreigners wanting Indians to not to vote for Modi again. We know what it means. LOL!!!!

Poor things, more they rub Modi more bigger he will become. :bunny:

Perhaps you are right. But I only know of one part of the human body that becomes bigger the more you rub it.

Are you a teenager?
 
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haha i f**king give a damn about Indian politics n who their people vote for- all Indian leaders look the same to me- all talk, but no action. India is still a abysmal place to be born and lived in no matter which man is in charge hahahahahaha.

My posts were about the specialty of Indians in employing propaganda and fake news.
 
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