The Japan Times - Hijacking news: Fake media sites sow Ukraine disinformation

EUR -
AED 3.958224
AFN 77.001934
ALL 98.984406
AMD 422.225916
ANG 1.947036
AOA 986.060298
ARS 1154.418251
AUD 1.70589
AWG 1.939791
AZN 1.831365
BAM 1.95782
BBD 2.181381
BDT 131.267239
BGN 1.956495
BHD 0.406238
BIF 3202.27768
BMD 1.077662
BND 1.445425
BOB 7.4647
BRL 6.180709
BSD 1.08034
BTN 92.373286
BWP 14.7896
BYN 3.535564
BYR 21122.169117
BZD 2.170069
CAD 1.539197
CDF 3093.446595
CHF 0.953154
CLF 0.025928
CLP 994.983682
CNY 7.821021
CNH 7.837677
COP 4455.592256
CRC 538.863379
CUC 1.077662
CUP 28.558035
CVE 110.378864
CZK 24.923056
DJF 192.382921
DKK 7.460566
DOP 68.271377
DZD 144.359222
EGP 54.458327
ERN 16.164925
ETB 141.955614
FJD 2.472907
FKP 0.836254
GBP 0.833614
GEL 2.995731
GGP 0.836254
GHS 16.745274
GIP 0.836254
GMD 77.052344
GNF 9342.854601
GTQ 8.313646
GYD 226.02316
HKD 8.380937
HNL 27.635893
HRK 7.535116
HTG 141.469218
HUF 400.10672
IDR 17833.415056
ILS 3.989116
IMP 0.836254
INR 92.481367
IQD 1415.279667
IRR 45369.557464
ISK 143.134906
JEP 0.836254
JMD 169.577292
JOD 0.764037
JPY 162.354582
KES 139.448173
KGS 93.170969
KHR 4324.561436
KMF 491.958718
KPW 969.912978
KRW 1578.655909
KWD 0.332297
KYD 0.900245
KZT 540.6052
LAK 23404.686658
LBP 96799.803689
LKR 320.127662
LRD 215.047042
LSL 19.730428
LTL 3.182055
LVL 0.651867
LYD 5.224511
MAD 10.388917
MDL 19.511399
MGA 5052.282135
MKD 61.555945
MMK 2262.639629
MNT 3751.710531
MOP 8.652847
MRU 42.997954
MUR 49.368204
MVR 16.606829
MWK 1873.358587
MXN 21.718612
MYR 4.777263
MZN 68.873553
NAD 19.730428
NGN 1658.317017
NIO 39.76194
NOK 11.348656
NPR 148.08282
NZD 1.873854
OMR 0.414886
PAB 1.080314
PEN 3.923502
PGK 4.451696
PHP 61.870734
PKR 302.907199
PLN 4.190552
PYG 8646.039389
QAR 3.940165
RON 4.977288
RSD 117.316395
RUB 90.795524
RWF 1555.42619
SAR 4.042576
SBD 9.068413
SCR 15.454542
SDG 647.137339
SEK 10.833216
SGD 1.443237
SHP 0.846873
SLE 24.57093
SLL 22598.027968
SOS 617.445536
SRD 39.177856
STD 22305.421186
SVC 9.451873
SYP 14011.61711
SZL 19.724805
THB 36.528539
TJS 11.758707
TMT 3.782593
TND 3.346178
TOP 2.52399
TRY 40.96149
TTD 7.332734
TWD 35.69808
TZS 2845.026401
UAH 44.899542
UGX 3960.085128
USD 1.077662
UYU 45.429812
UZS 13946.581078
VES 73.9422
VND 27561.197713
VUV 132.93112
WST 3.042439
XAF 656.643517
XAG 0.031938
XAU 0.000355
XCD 2.912434
XDR 0.816654
XOF 656.649617
XPF 119.331742
YER 265.131703
ZAR 19.620609
ZMK 9700.246662
ZMW 31.087502
ZWL 347.006624
  • RBGPF

    68.2200

    68.22

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    22.94

    -0.48%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    10.6

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    -0.2700

    38.31

    -0.7%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    49.97

    -0.86%

  • RIO

    0.0600

    62.87

    +0.1%

  • BTI

    0.1100

    40.82

    +0.27%

  • NGG

    0.5800

    63.57

    +0.91%

  • BP

    0.1300

    34.42

    +0.38%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    72.72

    -0.45%

  • CMSD

    -0.3000

    22.66

    -1.32%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    10.26

    +0.19%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.96

    -0.23%

  • BCE

    0.1200

    22.65

    +0.53%

  • BCC

    -0.5600

    100.77

    -0.56%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.36

    +0.11%

Hijacking news: Fake media sites sow Ukraine disinformation
Hijacking news: Fake media sites sow Ukraine disinformation / Photo: Sergei SUPINSKY - AFP

Hijacking news: Fake media sites sow Ukraine disinformation

A fake news website falsely claimed that Ukraine's president is paying Western reporters to tarnish US President Donald Trump -- part of a series of deceptive reports spread by Russian-linked portals mimicking media outlets.

Text size:

The disinformation tactic, amid heightened international efforts to halt the three-year war with Russia, seeks to undermine both Ukraine and public trust in mainstream media, researchers say.

This adds to the increasingly troubling trend of attributing false information to established media brands, illustrating how the news medium is being actively hijacked to advance Ukraine-related disinformation.

Earlier this month, Clear Story News falsely reported that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was using US taxpayer dollars to pay Western media journalists to target Trump.

The article was accompanied with an image of a letter purportedly sent by Zelensky's office to the leader of Ukraine's parliament, demanding that a "plan" be developed to "create a negative image" of Trump.

The letter appeared fabricated, with the seal and signature digitally altered and the formatting inconsistent with official letters from Zelensky's office, disinformation watchdog NewsGuard said, citing analysis from the media verification platform InVID.

NewsGuard called Clear Story News a Russian influence site linked to John Mark Dougan, a US fugitive turned Kremlin propagandist.

The article and purported letter were published a week later on USATimes.news, which researchers said was another apparently Russian-backed site.

- 'Piggybacking on credibility' -

The fake sites seek to make false information appear more credible and believable by exploiting public trust in legitimate media.

"These sites are often designed to mimic the tone, layout, and branding of traditional local news in order to launder false narratives through seemingly trustworthy, independent sources," NewsGuard researcher McKenzie Sadeghi told AFP.

"It's less about directly attacking the media and more about piggybacking on its credibility to reach audiences who might otherwise be skeptical of state-backed propaganda sources."

NewsGuard has identified 1,265 sites that present themselves as neutral news outlets but are backed by or tied to partisan groups or hostile governments, including Russia and Iran.

Last month, AFP's fact-checkers debunked a false claim that Zelensky had bought Adolf Hitler's former retreat, the Eagle's Nest, in the German state of Bavaria.

The claim was shared by aktuell-nachricht.de, a German-language site that purports to be a media outlet, without a publication date or the author's name. The site listed a company name and an address on its about page, but AFP was unable to locate either.

The site is linked to a Russian influence network dubbed Storm-1516, according to the German nonprofit Correctiv.

Western intelligence officials and disinformation researchers have associated the network with Dougan, a former Florida deputy sheriff, who fled to Russia while facing a slew of charges including extortion.

- 'Irony' -

"The irony is that the bad actors behind these operations are often dismissive and even downright hostile to mainstream news outlets yet go to great lengths to imitate it," Sadeghi said.

The blizzard of falsehoods promoted by such sites reflects a new normal in the age of information chaos, which researchers say is stoking distrust in the mainstream press.

Propaganda-spewing websites have typically relied on armies of writers, but generative artificial intelligence tools now offer a significantly cheaper and faster way to fabricate content that is often hard to decipher from authentic information.

Adding to the trend is the growing tactic of attributing false information to legitimate media organizations.

These include a video styled as a Wall Street Journal report promoting the false claim that US Vice President JD Vance rebuffed a top Ukrainian official.

Another was a fake Economist magazine cover that warned of an "apocalypse" and World War III over US military support for Ukraine.

"Disinformation actors are deliberately mimicking the names, logos, and formatting of trusted news organizations, including by using AI, to make their false claims appear legitimate," a separate NewsGuard report warned.

"They exploit the credibility of these organizations and aim to increase the chances that the false narrative will spread widely and be believed despite being baseless."

burs-ac/des

H.Nakamura--JT