Somebody deceived you hoax το 2014; Πολλοί από εμάς φαίνεται ότι είμαστε πολύ πρόθυμοι να πιστέψουμε ότι διαβάζουμε στο Facebook, ειδικά όταν οι δημοσιεύσεις έχουν κάποια φωτογραφία, ή κάποιο βίντεο σαν evidence. Hoaxes often look like news and provoke us to share them with our friends.
Post social media είναι σίγουρα πολύ εύκολο να κυκλοφορήσουν και να διαδοθούν ψευδείς ειδήσεις και όπως φαίνεται είναι πάρα πολλοί αυτοί που δεν αμφισβητούν αυτά που διαβάζουν και συνεχίζουν την διάδοση τους.
Recognizing false news is sometimes quite difficult, as crooks use real stories to build a fake. Let's take a look at the fake stories of the year to learn and try to make a better sort of what we will share with our 2015 friends.
The number one hoax that broke the year we passed was a post that first appeared in September trying to protect us from Facebook's terms and conditions. The hoax started with English-speaking accounts and was subsequently translated into Greek. It was based on the true event changeof Facebook policy, and was supposed to protect everyone who copied and pasted it on their wall.
Read: "Due to the fact that Facebook" New misleading message
It all started when Facebook changed the terms and conditions of use within 2014. Of course, as many times as you've copied and pasted the message, you've already agreed to Facebook terms. Let's mention the same publication reappeared in November, mentioning exactly the same things.
The hoax by charging the iPhone in a microwave oven!
A fake Apple ad began to circulate on the Internet this fall, arguing that there was one a new way to charge your iPhone: with the microwave oven. Hypothetically, the new operating system had the ability to “allow you to charge with microwave frequencies that uses a oven. "
We do not want to believe, of course, that there were people who fired their phones, and we believe that spreading this prank was just because the event was funny.
The hoax that wants Facebook to charge its users!
This prank is almost as old as Facebook itself. But it continues to circulate and spread, citing a fake "news agency" that says the social network will start charging its users $ 2,99 a month to avoid an "irreparable financial burden." The hoax has been shared more than 2,3 million times on Facebook since its publication in September. It is known, of course, that Facebook has stated that it will never charge for its services, since it earns money from the sale of ads.
There are no angels I tell you. The hoax with the angel saves a rider
Released on Facebook in August. A video shows an angel saving a teleporter (along with his motorbike) escaping the course of a truck. Of course, the video does not show any teleportation.
In fact, the video was created with the help of editing, and is part of an ad campaign from a Chinese computer game called Dragon Totem Girl (Zhu Xian 2). The hype on the game shows the main character of having various superpowers (such as teleportation) and helping the world in its everyday life.
The hoax with the appearing defeat that became a model
Posted on Facebook, "hot convict" Jeremy Meeks reportedly signed a $ 30,000 contract with modeling agency Blaze Modelz. It was later found that the posts were fake, but that it was too late to stop the rumors.