Sunday, July 09, 2023

Twitter Blue accounts fuel Ukraine War misinformation

  • Published
IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS

False and misleading posts about the Ukraine conflict continue to go viral on major social media platforms, as Russia's invasion of the country extends beyond 500 days.

Some of the most widely shared examples can be found on Twitter, posted by subscribers with a blue tick, who pay for their content to be promoted to other users.

Weapons for Ukraine not used in French riots

Many misleading posts have been shared online about the recent riots in France, but one viral post last week focused on US military aid to Ukraine.

It featured a screenshot of what appeared to be a headline from a news website, along with an image of two rifles.

"French police are fired upon with American rifles that may have come from Ukraine," reads the headline.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

Several Twitter accounts with Blue subscriptions have shared the post, which has been viewed more than a million times.

BBC Verify has traced it back to pro-Kremlin channels on the Telegram messaging app. The image used in the post appears in a Russian military blog from 2012 about a shooting competition held on a firing range near Moscow.

We have also been unable to find any online articles with the headline and picture as above, and there is no evidence any weapons provided to Ukraine by the US have been used during the recent unrest in France.

No evidence of 'baby factories' in Ukraine

Several Twitter accounts with a blue tick have recently promoted a claim that Russia has discovered "baby factories" in Ukraine.

Children between the ages of two and seven are said to be "factory farmed", and either sent to "child sex brothels" or to have their organs harvested and sold in the West.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

BBC Verify has traced the origin of the claim to an article published in March by The People's Voice, an alternative name for YourNewsWire, which has been described by fact-checking organisations as one of the biggest producers of fake news on the internet.

It has previously promoted a wide range of false and misleading stories, including anti-vaccine conspiracy theories and false claims about the 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas.

The Russian government and Kremlin-controlled media have a history of promoting unsubstantiated claims about illegal organ harvesting in Ukraine.

Kramatorsk missile not Ukrainian

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, a post by an account with a Twitter Blue subscription, which positions itself as a legitimate news source, claimed the strike was mistakenly launched by Ukraine and hit a military barracks housing Nato troops and foreign mercenaries.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

"Storm Shadow missile suddenly changed trajectory dramatically, hitting Kramatorsk obliterated a Ukrainian military barracks housing foreign soldiers and mercenaries," the tweet claimed.

The post was viewed more than a million times.

There is no evidence that a missile launched by Ukrainian forces was responsible, nor that a military barracks was hit.

Zelensky has not cancelled elections

Posts claiming Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has "cancelled" elections in Ukraine have recently gone viral on Twitter.

Asked whether there will be elections in Ukraine next year, Mr Zelensky responded: "If we win [the war], there will be. It means there will be no martial law, no war. Elections must be held in peacetime, when there is no war, according to the law."

Commenting on the statement, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who's been critical of US aid for Ukraine, said in his recently launched Twitter show that Mr Zelensky's comments proved he'd ended democracy in Ukraine.

Twitter Blue accounts on a similar theme have been shared hundreds of thousands of times.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

The Ukrainian constitution prohibits the dissolution of parliament and national elections during martial law, meaning the current president and parliament will remain in charge until the period of martial law comes to an end.

Oleksii Danilov, secretary of Ukraine's national security and defence council, recently confirmed that based on the Ukrainian constitution, "no elections can take place" while martial law is in effect in the country.

Contacted by BBC Verify for a response to the false and misleading Twitter Blue posts highlighted in this article, Twitter's press office acknowledged receipt of our enquiry, but declined to comment.

Man fails to rob nail salon after customers ignore him and the footage is hilarious

Jul 7 2023,

11Alive/YouTube

A failed robbery at an Atlanta, Georgia, nail salon was caught on camera, and the internet is having a field day roasting the alleged burglar.

The attempted robbery occurred on Monday, July 3, at Nail1st. Crime Stoppers Atlanta released CCTV footage on Thursday to help search for the suspect, reported local media.

The video shows a man wearing a blue baseball hat, black shirt, sunglasses and light blue jeans entering the salon around 2:35 pm.

“Everybody get down!” he yells. One of his hands is inside a bag, which he points at people. “Give me all your money!”

A row of customers sitting to his right barely flinches as he screams, “Empty out your pockets!”

The phone rings at the cash register and an employee answers. The robber turns to the worker and tells them to “get down!” and “grab the money!” but the employee continues to take the call.

One of the patrons sitting at the front of the salon gets up to leave.

“Give me your money! Where’s the money?” the thief yells at her. She seems to reply, “I don’t have any,” as she casually walks out the door.

“Everybody, give me everything!” he says to no reaction from the clientele.

He tries yelling a couple more times, looking around for any reaction, then gives up and dejectedly walks out of the door.

The customer that got up earlier is standing outside. In one last-ditch effort, he says, “Give me your money,” to which she replies in an annoyed tone, “I don’t have any!”



The video is circulating social media, and people have been dragging the not-so-successful robber online.

“Lmfao, this is great! I’m glad everyone is okay. He thought he was going to leave wealthy, but he left broke AND feeling stupid,” commented one person.

“Never thought I’d feel bad for a criminal, but here we are,” added another person.

One Twitter user said the lack of reaction indicates how bad the current economy is.

“You know the economy is bad when not even gunpoint can make you give up the little you have,” reads the tweet.

Another person thinks the customers handled the situation effectively. “Do y’all see how minding your business can literally save your life?”

One commenter had some feedback for the alleged robber. “He should’ve said it’s a prank! To save himself from embarrassment.”

While the internet is making light of the situation, the Atlanta Police Department is still looking for the suspect.

Authorities urge anyone who recognizes the person in the video or has any relevant information to come forward.

Tips can be submitted anonymously to the Crime Stoppers Atlanta tip line at 404-577-TIPS (8477) or online here.

Those providing information leading to the arrest and indictment of the suspect may be eligible for a reward of up to $2,000.

The massive Sphere in Las Vegas puts on mesmerizing sneak peek show

A preview of the capabilities of Sphere's massive LED screen.

The Las Vegas skyline has a multitude of over-the-top visual splendour, but the latest addition, called the MSG Sphere, makes Sin City stand out on a whole new level.


Now known as the largest sphere on Earth, the dominating dome boasts the world’s largest video screen, and the city was treated to a preview of its astonishing capabilities on the Fourth of July.

As part of the sneak peek show, residents and tourists watched in awe as the 366-foot-tall Sphere cycled through a multitude of mind-bending displays, including a giant, ominous eyeball, a basketball, a snow globe, a Jack-o’-lantern and even the Earth itself.

To achieve such impressive displays on the Sphere’s 580,000-square-foot fully programmable LED screen — named the Exosphere — engineers fitted the exterior with 1.2 million LED “pucks.” Each puck contains 48 individual LED diodes capable of displaying 256 million different colours.

Sphere lights up for the first time in celebration of Independence Day on July 4, 2023 in Las Vegas. Greg Doherty / Getty Images

“It’s absolutely stunning to look up and see what’s in front of you,” Rich Claffey, Sphere’s chief operations officer, told CNN. “I’ve been in the entertainment business for almost 40 years. I’ve never seen anything like this, and I’m not exaggerating. It is off the charts.”

Populous, an architecture firm behind some of the world’s top arenas, designed Sphere. It’s nearing completion and officially opens on Sept. 29, when it will welcome almost 18,000 guests to the U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere show.

Sphere lights up for the first time in celebration of Independence Day on July 4, 2023 in Las Vegas. Greg Doherty / Getty Images

The videos and photos from Sphere’s Fourth of July preview are almost unbelievable. The orb dwarfs cars driving on a nearby road and has spawned plenty of jokes about its size and capabilities.


Sphere will primarily be used as a live music and film venue, but will also have the infrastructure to host sporting events like boxing and mixed martial arts. In November, the Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix’s street circuit will pass through the Sphere property.

In addition to 160,000 speakers, the venue will also offer 4-D experiences, with vibrating seats and wind machines.

Sphere lights up for the first time in celebration of Independence Day on July 4, 2023 in Las Vegas. Greg Doherty / Getty Images

“Most music venues are sports venues. They’re built for sports — they’re not built for music. They’re not built for art,” U2 frontman Bono said in an Apple Music interview earlier this year, as he toured the venue. “This building was built for immersive experiences in cinema and performance.”

Sphere sits one block off the notorious Las Vegas Strip and will connect via pedestrian walkway to the nearby Venetian resort complex.

University of Saskatchewan students send satellite to space

By Andrew Benson Global News
Posted July 7, 2023
Students from the University of Saskatchewan designed and built their own miniature satellite called a CubeSat. Courtesy of Nanoracks

It’s not every day a school project gets sent to space, but for students from the University of Saskatchewan, their own satellite has officially left the Earth’s atmosphere.


The students involved worked for five years on their RADSAT-SK CubeSat.

A CubeSat is a class of miniaturized satellites, measuring roughly 10 cm by 10 cm by 10 cm. Students say the satellite carries two experiments involving space radiation and was launched into orbit a month ago by a SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket.

Just this week, the satellite was launched from the International Space Station.

“It’s kind of unreal,” said Dustin Preece, a CubeSat project student and the technical manager. “Just to see the thermal tape on there, glimmer in the sun every once in a while. That was really cool.”

The CubeSat will test a new cheap radiation measuring device, and a radiation shielding epoxy made out of melanin.



While the project took five years to get off the ground, it felt like a short time for Preece.

“There was so much to do and at times the days blurred together,” he said. “It’s been an amazing journey and I’m just very grateful to have been part of it.”

Preece said CubeSats are far cheaper to launch than traditional satellites due to their size, making such projects more accessible for universities.

The satellite is part of the Canadian CubeSat Project that started in 2018, involving more than 2,000 students across Canada. Its aim is to boost interest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics while involving students in real space missions.

“(It’s) a very exciting moment for students in Canada who wish and dream of working in the space industry,” Tony Pellerin, a Canadian Space Agency (CSA) manager and technical lead of the project said in a recent interview.

The RADSAT was designed and developed at the University of Saskatchewan.

“Once we tested it, we took it to Montreal to the Canadian Space Agency headquarters,” Preece said. “And it launched from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida.”

“For now, it’s an academic project and we’ll see where it goes,” he explained. “Hopefully it does help the radiation industry, the nuclear industry and the space industry too.”

Preece hopes projects like this continue to come out of Saskatchewan, and says he wants to continue developing and sending satellites into space.

“We’re proud to represent Saskatchewan, and we want to expand Saskatchewan’s presence in the aerospace and the space industry,” Preece said. “It’s just been a privilege to be on this journey with everyone.”

This Montrealer forged medieval axes used to rebuild Notre-Dame cathedral

Meticulous detail needed to fashion axes just as they were made 800 years ago

Montreal blacksmith forging 12th century tools to rebuild Notre-Dame in Paris

1 day ago
Duration2:03
A Montreal blacksmith is forging the same type of tools — axes — that were used to build the original Notre-Dame de Paris. They will be used to help rebuild the cathedral's roof and spire, which were destroyed in a catastrophic fire in 2019.

The axe head, heated by the flames of Mathieu Collette's forge, glows white hot among the coals. 

Collette, a blacksmith who uses traditional methods to fashion tools from iron and steel, pulls it from the fire and, with a series of hammer blows, moulds it into shape. 

Meanwhile, in France, possibly at this very moment, carpenters are using axes he fashioned to carve logs of red oak into roof trusses for Notre-Dame-de-Paris, the world's most famous cathedral. 

The axes had to be as close as possible to the originals used by the carpenters who first built the cathedral in the 12th and 13th centuries — so that the new wood beams would bear the same markings as the old. 

Collette and the other toolsmiths who went to France to help with the project were uniquely positioned to make them. 

man working on anvil
Mathieu Collette hammers a hot, glowing axe head. (Matthew Lapierre/CBC)

"We're the only ones left," Collette said in an interview this week at his Montreal forge, located in an old pump house in the Peel Basin. 

"We made the axes the same way, using techniques, materials and tools of the time."

After a 2019 fire destroyed part of its roof, walls and spire, officials in France decided to reproduce the church exactly as it had been built some 800 years ago.

Man shaving metal on an anvil.
Mathieu Collette works a red-hot axe head on an anvil in his Montreal workshop. (Matthew Lapierre/CBC)

It's an undertaking that requires meticulous attention to detail.

To know what types of axes to make, Soumia Luquet, the director of the Maison Luquet, a traditional workshop near Munster, France, and her team analyzed the markings that remained on wood oak beams salvaged from Notre-Dame. They also looked at old engravings that showed workmen of the time hoisting axes and using tools.

It was a forensic investigation, of sorts, as they tried to create axes which, in the hands of modern craftspeople, would leave the same marks on the wood as those of the 13th century. 

man cutting wood beam in front of cathedral.
A worker uses an axe to cut woods during a public demonstration taking place in front of Notre-Dame-de-Paris to show the medieval techniques used for the lifting of a part of the reconstructed framework of the cathedral. (Alain Jocard/AFP via Getty Images)

They decided on five models of axes — some built for chopping, others for finer, finishing work. But to make enough for the team of craftspeople, they needed to make multiple replicas of each axe, 60 in total. 

Given that it takes nine to 14 hours to make one axe, Luquet knew they needed additional manpower.

Enter Collette, who, in the world of toolsmithing, is seen as a master. 

Toolsmithing "disappeared from history" with industrialization Luquet said, "and Mathieu is one of the first of this generation who chose to go to that job."

Trusses
A crane lifts a part of the new roof of the Notre-Dame cathedral, Thursday, May 25, 2023, near Angers, western France. (Jeffrey Schaeffer/AP Photo)

Collette arrived in France in October 2022 and, for weeks with little sleep, he worked alongside a small group of toolsmiths. Shoulder to shoulder, working in the 50 C heat of the forge, surrounded by fire and the noise of hammers striking iron, they fashioned raw iron ore into the axes, which upon completion, were sent to the carpenters.

"I think that we still can't believe what we have done," Luquet said. "You know in a way that you left a part of you in history."

In a way, Luquet said, the fire gave them the opportunity to build a new knowledge base, to relearn an art that was lost to history, and, as one of their team put it, to rebuild the cathedral, destroyed in a fire, with the fires of their forges. 

Man working metal near fire.
Beads of sweat drip off of Mathieu Collette's face as he works near the forge. It can reach 50 C inside the workshop. (Matthew Lapierre/CBC)

"This is a lifetime project," Collette said. "I'm so sad that the church burned. It should never have happened. But actually, I'm very proud."

Collette sees it as a spiritual undertaking — his role not as protector of a lost art, but as one of the first of a new generation of toolsmiths. Work on the cathedral, while important, is a way to show the public what role his craft can play in the context of a changing climate and a need to reduce waste.

"It's important to have edged tool blacksmiths today," he said. "All society has been developed around the capacities of the blacksmith." 

On a recent day at his forge, known as Forges de Montreal and home to a small museum where Collette teaches his art, he worked on a Biscayne axe head, the type used by fur traders in the 1700s. Collette turns some of these old axe heads, rusted and corroded, into shining, freshly sharpened tools that can be used again. 

When the metal is still hot after he has hammered and trimmed it to the right shape, he places his stamp and with a strong blow, leaves his mark on the iron. 


"This is the value of a traditional blacksmith is to help the community," Collette said.

"I find myself happier if I'm helping people."

The response to Meta is distinct in Quebec, both in politics and business

A person stands in front of a Meta sign outside of the company's headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., Tuesday, March 7, 2023. Canada's government has announced on Wednesday July 5, that it will stop advertising on Facebook and Instagram in response to Meta’s decision to block access to news content on their social platforms as part of a temporary test.
(AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Pierre Saint-Arnaud
The Canadian Press
Staff
Published July 8, 2023 

The contrast between Quebec and the rest of Canada's response to the tug-of-war between Ottawa and Meta is striking, both in the political and business worlds.

This week, the federal and Quebec governments announced the withdrawal of their advertising from Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, to protest the web giant's decision to block links to Canadian news.

Meta aims to force the Trudeau government's hand by opposing Bill C-18, which would require web platforms to pay royalties to the news media.

Ottawa and Quebec City's decision to withdraw advertising was followed by several Quebec municipalities as well as some Quebec media outlets

FEDERAL AND PROVINCIAL PARTIES DIVERGE

As far as political parties are concerned, however, the situation varies dramatically.

In Quebec, all parties have stopped advertising on Meta platforms.

Premier François Legault's office confirmed to The Canadian Press on Friday that the Coalition avenir Québec (CAQ), as well as all CAQ MNAs, have ended their Facebook ad buys.

The Quebec Liberal Party and Québec solidaire did not have any ads on the platform at the time of the controversy, and will not launch any until further notice.

The Parti québécois, for its part, had already decided to withdraw its advertising from Facebook at the end of June.

At the federal level, the opposite is true.

The Liberal Party of Canada has not followed in the footsteps of the government it leads.

Both the Liberals and the New Democratic Party (NDP) have confirmed, in e-mails to The Canadian Press, that they are maintaining their advertising on Meta.

As for the Conservative Party, the question doesn't even arise, since the Conservatives are opposed to Bill C-18.

Only one federal party has withdrawn from Facebook: the Bloc Québécois.

REAL LEVERAGE?

According to analyses provided by Professor Jean-Hugues Roy of the Université du Québec à Montréal, Meta generated between $3.7 billion and $4 billion of advertising revenues in Canada in 2022.

With these numbers in mind, the ad withdrawals announced so far do not constitute a major loss; for example, Ottawa says it spends around $10 million a year on Facebook and Instagram.

The bulk of the money raised by Meta in Canada comes from private advertisers. The Quebec business community has begun to withdraw, at least in part, while little appears to be moving in this direction elsewhere in Canada.

MOBILIZATION OF AGENCIES AND ADVERTISERS

In addition to the withdrawal of Quebec state-owned companies such as Loto-Québec and the SAQ liquor retailer, the president of Montreal's Chamber of Commerce, Michel Leblanc, called on companies Thursday to boycott Meta's platforms completely.

Meanwhile, Quebec's association of advertising agencies (A2C) is relaunching its local media project, called Mouvement médias d'ici, first created three years ago.

The movement calls on companies to devote at least 25 per cent of their advertising budgets to local media.

"What we're saying is: realize that there are other options," said A2C president and CEO Dominique Villeneuve.

"We didn't want the target to be too big to reach, but for everyone to be able to make changes to their media plans and investment. What's changed is that we've created a public commitment."

"We're in discussions with several advertisers, and many agencies have already followed suit and signed up. We're very enthusiastic about the current response," she continued, adding that the names of the signatory companies should be announced next week.

STATUS QUO ON THE CANADIAN SIDE

A2C's Canadian counterpart, the Association of Canadian Advertisers (ACA), has not called on its members to take action. In a statement sent to The Canadian Press, the association said it's "disappointed to learn that global platform giants are preparing to block news for Canadians."

Its president, Ron Lund, asserts that "blocking links to Canadian news is not fair to consumers or advertisers of online content."

But the ACA confines itself to encouraging Google and Meta "to continue to work with the government to find a win-win solution."

The only movement outside Quebec has come from major Canadian media outlets, which are stakeholders in the conflict by nature. Initially, the Toronto Star went at it alone, but the CBC, Postmedia and Bell Media joined the movement.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French on July 8, 2023.