-
Sri Lanka cyclone caused $4.1 bn damage: World Bank
-
Billionaire Ellison offers personal guarantee for son's bid for Warner Bros
-
Tech stocks lead Wall Street higher, gold hits fresh record
-
Telefonica to shed around 5,500 jobs in Spain
-
Cambodia says Thailand launches air strikes after ASEAN meet on border clashes
-
McCullum wants to stay as England coach despite Ashes drubbing
-
EU slams China dairy duties as 'unjustified'
-
Italy fines Apple nearly 100 mn euros over app privacy feature
-
America's Cup switches to two-year cycle
-
Jesus could start for Arsenal in League Cup, says Arteta
-
EU to probe Czech aid for two nuclear units
-
Strauss says sacking Stokes and McCullum will not solve England's Ashes woes
-
Clashing Cambodia, Thailand agree to border talks after ASEAN meet
-
Noel takes narrow lead after Alta Badia slalom first run
-
Stocks diverge as rate hopes rise, AI fears ease
-
Man City players face Christmas weigh-in as Guardiola issues 'fatty' warning
-
German Christmas markets hit by flood of fake news
-
Liverpool fear Isak has broken leg: reports
-
West Indies captain says he 'let the team down' in New Zealand Tests
-
Thailand says Cambodia agrees to border talks after ASEAN meet
-
Alleged Bondi shooters conducted 'tactical' training in countryside, Australian police say
-
Swiss court to hear landmark climate case against cement giant
-
Steelers beat Lions in 'chaos' as three NFL teams book playoffs
-
Knicks' Brunson scores 47, Bulls edge Hawks epic
-
Global nuclear arms control under pressure in 2026
-
Five-wicket Duffy prompts West Indies collapse as NZ win series 2-0
-
Asian markets rally with Wall St as rate hopes rise, AI fears ease
-
Jailed Malaysian ex-PM Najib loses bid for house arrest
-
Banned film exposes Hong Kong's censorship trend, director says
-
Duffy, Patel force West Indies collapse as NZ close in on Test series win
-
Australian state pushes tough gun laws, 'terror symbols' ban after shooting
-
A night out on the town during Nigeria's 'Detty December'
-
US in 'pursuit' of third oil tanker in Caribbean: official
-
CO2 soon to be buried under North Sea oil platform
-
Steelers edge Lions as Bears, 49ers reach playoffs
-
India's Bollywood counts costs as star fees squeeze profits
-
McCullum admits errors in Ashes preparations as England look to salvage pride
-
Pets, pedis and peppermints: When the diva is a donkey
-
'A den of bandits': Rwanda closes thousands of evangelical churches
-
Southeast Asia bloc meets to press Thailand, Cambodia on truce
-
As US battles China on AI, some companies choose Chinese
-
AI resurrections of dead celebrities amuse and rankle
-
Parallel Society Reveals Lineup for 2026 Lisbon Edition - A Cross-Genre Mashup of Cultural and Tech Pioneers
-
Ai4 2026 Announces Dynamic Keynote Panel Featuring Geoffrey Hinton, Fei‑Fei Li & Andrew Ng
-
NESR Becomes First Oilfield Services Company to Commission Original Artwork Created from Recycled Produced Water
-
SMX Strikes Joint Initiative with FinGo & Bougainville Refinery Ltd to Deliver Verifiable Identification for Trillion Dollar Gold Market
-
Blue Gold and Trust Stamp Execute Strategic LOI to Develop Biometric, Passwordless Wallet Infrastructure for Gold-Backed Digital Assets
-
SK tes Announces Grand Opening of New Shannon Facility, Marking a Milestone for Sustainable Technology in Ireland
-
FDA Officially Confirms Kava is a Food Under Federal Law
-
Greenliant NVMe NANDrive(TM) SSDs Selected for Major Industrial, Aerospace and Mission Critical Programs
Musk's X feeds monetization of wartime misinformation
Influencers on X are monetizing misinformation about conflicts in the Middle East, leveraging the platform's contentious policies that researchers say prioritize engagement over accuracy.
Since Elon Musk's turbulent 2022 acquisition of X, formerly Twitter, the site has restored thousands of once-banned accounts and introduced a paid verification system that critics say has boosted conspiracy theorists.
X also rolled out an ad revenue-sharing program for verified users, who often peddle hateful and false information to profit from the platform.
"Cynical pay-for-play controversialists today deliberately induce anger for engagement to game Musk's platform into giving them more visibility, and therefore more revenue for their views," Imran Ahmed, chief executive of the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), told AFP.
X has seen a tsunami of falsehoods about the ongoing war between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas, fueled partly by prominent US influencers such as Jackson Hinkle, who last month falsely claimed a video showed Iran bombing American military bases in Iraq.
The incendiary post came amid widespread concerns about a wider conflagration in the Middle East.
Using a reverse image search, AFP fact-checkers found the video actually depicted an attack in Iraq's Kurdistan region.
In another provocative post debunked by AFP, Hinkle wrongly claimed that Yemen had declared "war with Israel" in support of the Palestinians.
While Yemen's Huthi rebels have targeted Israel with missiles and drones, neither they nor the country's internationally recognized government has formally declared war.
- 'Topsy-turvy' -
In addition to raising tens of thousands of dollars on crowdfunding sites, Hinkle offers "premium content" to subscribers on X for $3 per month.
"Your support helps me continue exposing the Deep State after I was banned & demonetized by YouTube, Twitch, PayPal & Venmo," his appeal says.
When reached by AFP, Hinkle -- whose false posts have garnered millions of views -- refused to say how much revenue he was generating on X, instead criticizing coverage of the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.
Hinkle makes at least $3,000 a month from paid subscribers, according to a rough CCDH estimate based on the engagement data of his subscriber-only posts.
Last August, Hinkle disclosed on X that he also earned $1,693 through the ad revenue-sharing scheme, while complaining that other users with smaller engagement were getting bigger payouts.
Britain-based creator Sulaiman Ahmed and Danish physician Anastasia Maria Loupis -- both of whom AFP has repeatedly fact-checked for war-related misinformation -- are also reaping the benefits of X's verification and paid subscriber programs.
Neither responded to requests for comment.
CCDH's Ahmed said Musk has "created a topsy-turvy platform on which authoritative sources struggle to be heard above the noise -- while liars and hate actors are put on a pedestal, generating revenue for themselves and the platform."
X did not respond to AFP's request for comment.
- 'Unrealistic' -
To be eligible for ad revenue sharing, users must meet requirements such as subscribing to X's $8 per month premium subscription and having at least 500 followers.
Last year, Musk said posts with Community Notes -- an X feature that allows users to refute claims and offer additional context -- would be "ineligible for revenue share."
"The idea is to maximize the incentive for accuracy over sensationalism," Musk wrote on X.
But Jack Brewster, from the media watchdog NewsGuard, told AFP that "viral posts advancing misinformation frequently do not get flagged by Community Notes."
In October, NewsGuard analyzed 250 of the most popular posts promoting one of 10 prominent false or unsubstantiated narratives about the Israel-Hamas war.
Only 32 percent of them had been flagged by a Community Note, it found.
The following month, NewsGuard identified ads from 86 major companies -- including top brands, governments, and nonprofits -- on viral posts advancing "false or egregiously misleading claims about the Israel-Hamas war."
That included an ad for the FBI on a post from Hinkle that falsely claimed a video showed an Israeli military helicopter firing on its own citizens.
The video actually showed Israeli war planes over Gaza, NewsGuard said, adding that the post -- viewed nearly two million times -- did not have a Community Note.
"Community Notes as currently structured is not a system that scales to cover all contexts," Jacob Shapiro, a Princeton University professor who served on the program's advisory group before Musk's acquisition, told AFP.
"To expect volunteer labor alone to capture... deceptive content as a defense against allowing people to monetize that content reflects unrealistic expectations for what the tool can do."
F.Wilson--AT