Fake and misleading images of Australia’s bushfire crisis are being circulated
Images of Australia’s fire crisis have shocked people around the world but many of them are not what they seem.
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Australia’s massive bushfires have shocked people around the world and led to an outpouring of sympathy and donations.
While images of the fire have drawn interest worldwide, not all of them are quite what they seem.
Some bushfire maps have been criticised for misleading people about the location and size of the fires, with a map used by the ABC in the US appearing to show the entire east coast of Australia on fire, as well as a strange line of fires through the centre of the country.
Whoever does your maps ... fire them
â Adam Gartrell (@adamgartrell) January 7, 2020
Hi @ABC I'm sitting in Perth and I'm a little worried, this map says we're on fire. ð¥
â Prometheus𧢠(@PrometheusAM) January 7, 2020
A Brisbane photographer whose 3D visualisation of the fires went viral, also had to explain the picture was not a photo and actually showed fire hotspots over a month from December 5 until January 5.
Another map shows fires covering most of Western Australia when in fact most of the worst-hit areas are on the east coast of the country.
Pls just rt to let everyone know what is going on in Australia while you are concerned about world war 3
â save Australia ð (@DrunkKnJ) January 3, 2020
Lots of people are dying and animals too #worldwar3 #AustraliaOnFire pic.twitter.com/mpv5JdwbGy
There are also photos circulating that are not from the current crisis.
A photo of a woman and five children clinging to a wharf was actually taken during the Tasmanian bushfires in 2013.
Stephanie Hunt, Australian editor of Storyful, which sources, verifies and analyses social media content for local and international news outlets, told The Australian there had been a huge amount of misinformation about the fires.
Even some celebrities had shared the bogus content, including Nine Network sports presenter Erin Molan and former rugby player Wendell Sailor, who shared a video of a collision between fire trucks, which actually happened in 2015 in South Australia.
Do you think that Facebook or Twitter will do anything about these fake images circulating on social media about the Australian bushfires?
â Malcolm Roberts ð¦ðº (@MRobertsQLD) January 7, 2020
Or do they only police stories and imaged they think hurt the left.
Link https://t.co/UXTcbGEdZ1 pic.twitter.com/hULj7Pvoob
She advised people to think about where an image came from before posting on social media, and to do a Google image search if something looked too good to be true.
Originally published as Fake and misleading images of Australia’s bushfire crisis are being circulated