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Turkey earthquakes: Online misinformation triggers panic and real-world harm
Online accounts sharing false or misleading information about Monday's devastating earthquakes, which killed at least 11,000 people in Turkey and Syria, have been criticised by scientists and the medical community for playing on people's fears.
Dutch 'seismologist' Frank Hoogerbeets, who is being widely lauded online for allegedly 'predicting' the quakes, has been among those criticised, with modern scientists saying it is impossible to predict earthquakes.
"This account is quickly approaching 1 million followers, mostly from our region. Scientists agree there is no scientific method for earthquake prediction. Please don't let him take advantage of people's very real fears," tweeted Richard Salame, a journalist at Lebanese outlet L'Orient Today.
This account is quickly approaching 1 million followers, mostly from our region. Scientists agree there is no scientific method for earthquake prediction. Please don’t let him take advantage of people’s very real fears
— Richard Salame (@rjsalame)
Hoogerbeets allegedly released a video days before the earthquake 'predicting' the disaster using the geometry of planets and other celestial bodies - a method widely viewed as unscientific.
In response, Diego Melgar, an Associate Professor of geophysics at the University of Oregon tweeted: "We call this 'snake oil' in the US. Could also be referred to as a 'quack'."
We call this "snake oil" in the US. Could also be referred to as a "quack". An "opportunistic buffoon" is another term that comes to mind...
— Prof. Diego Melgar 🌊 (@geosmx)
Several other accounts have been criticised for sharing false videos of the damage, including accounts using videos of the planned demolition of buildings in India or the 2020 Port of Beirut blast, claiming they were from Turkey or Syria.
This account was suspended after repeatedly posting misinformation. That video wasn't from Syria -- it shows a planned demo in India.
— Kelly Jones (@kelly_metz)
That account was suspicious for a # of reasons. It posted footage in high frequency & most of it was false - not from Feb. 6 earthquake.
Footage claiming a Turkish Nuclear Power exploded during the devastating earthquake that hit the country a number of days ago. The actual footage - 4 August 2020, a large amount of ammonium nitrate stored at the Port of Beirut
— The Aletheia Project (@proaletheia)
A number of Turkish and international users are attempting to combat this misinformation, which can be used to take advantage of viewers or spread panic during this natural disaster. Turkish fact-checking website Doğruluk Payı fact-checked several such claims and urged users to be more careful when sharing information online.
⚠️Sabaha karşı gerçekleşen deprem 10 ilimizi etkiledi. Hepimize geçmiş olsun.
— Doğruluk Payı (@dogrulukpayicom)
Sosyal medyada doğruluğunu kontrol etmeden paylaştığınız bilgi ve görseller deprem gibi bir kriz durumunda korku ve paniği arttırabilir. Lütfen yaymadan önce paylaşımınızın doğruluğundan emin olun.
Fahrettin Altun, the chief of communications for the Turkish Presidency, urged Twitter and Elon Musk "to pay special attention to disinformation and misinformation efforts on the platform", adding it "can cost lives and slow down our efforts".
It is critical in such an emergency for to pay special attention to disinformation and misinformation efforts on the platform. This can cost lives and slow down our efforts. We expect a responsible attitude on the part of Twitter.
— Fahrettin Altun (@fahrettinaltun)
"In times of crisis misinformation often thrives online because everyone is trying to share information they believe is true, or which can be helpful to others. These claims, despite being false, misleading or inaccurate, aren't usually shared out of malicious intent but can still pollute the online information space," Esther Chan, editor at RMIT FactLab, a research hub dedicated to countering misinformation, told .
"This could have an impact on people's survival as most of us count on social media for useful information such as escape routes, locations of shelters etc. "
The Turkish government in fact launched a smartphone app a day after the quakes to catch those who share misinformation - a move criticised by experts who see it as an attempt at censorship.
"A careless mistake, [such as] clicking on the 'share' button too quickly could lead to 1-3 years of imprisonment if found guilty under a new "disinformation" law passed in [the] Turkish parliament last October," said Chan.
The series of earthquakes and aftershocks in southern Turkey have devastated densely populated urban centers, including Gaziantep, Diyarbakir, Adana and Iskenderun in Turkey and Aleppo, Latakia, Tartous and Hama in Syria.