Posts on Facebook featuring an image of President-elect Donald Trump in front of photographs in an office are being shared ...
An aerial clip of destroyed buildings is being shared with false claims it depicts Gaza, when it is actually of a town in Damascus.
Health misinformation can ruin lives and damage health services. Our health team fact checks claims about health including funding and delivery, and dangerous medical claims, and makes recommendations ...
A trusted source is your safest option. If you don’t know the source, check out the about page or ask yourself why they’re sharing the story. We’ve been fact checking a new kind of misinformation ...
The clip has been shared on social media with claims it shows Syrian government forces firing at the rebel group HTS in the city of Hama. There is a two-stage process for defining a “less healthy” ...
A picture shows Syria’s former President Bashar al-Assad and his wife in Moscow after the collapse of his regime. This is not true. The picture is a still from a video of the pair filmed in Aleppo, ...
An image of a child has been shared more than 4,000 times with claims it shows the “reality” of Gaza, but it is actually unrelated to the conflict in the Middle East.
This isn’t true. Amazon says this is not a real offer. A post claiming that Amazon is offering Samsung TVs for £3 to Facebook users who fill out an online form is not true. The Facebook post says that ...
False. The clip shows US Navy operational testing in 2017. A clip showing shots directed at a small boat is circulating with the claim it shows “pirates”. But it actually shows a US Navy exercise.
The video actually shows Argentinian dancer Pablo Acosta. Social media posts claiming to show Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy belly dancing in a tight sparkly outfit actually show an ...
This is not a real photo. It comes from a video uploaded to TikTok and created using artificial intelligence. An image is being shared on social media with claims it shows a prisoner who has been ...