The Prague Post - How queen’s death followed a disinformation playbook

EUR -
AED 4.167283
AFN 72.057744
ALL 93.940972
AMD 418.148862
ANG 2.031617
AOA 1040.543881
ARS 1669.152813
AUD 1.646332
AWG 2.043926
AZN 1.924332
BAM 1.950431
BBD 2.289886
BDT 139.675482
BGN 1.918686
BHD 0.427785
BIF 3387.157615
BMD 1.134726
BND 1.472845
BOB 7.873325
BRL 5.881972
BSD 1.136965
BTN 107.645658
BWP 15.460438
BYN 3.193209
BYR 22240.632914
BZD 2.286605
CAD 1.614993
CDF 2574.693486
CHF 0.921515
CLF 0.026351
CLP 1037.106052
CNY 7.705355
CNH 7.730974
COP 3893.029888
CRC 515.77329
CUC 1.134726
CUP 30.070243
CVE 110.493959
CZK 24.234353
DJF 201.663796
DKK 7.475343
DOP 66.438208
DZD 151.771921
EGP 56.340515
ERN 17.020893
ETB 183.298583
FJD 2.550581
FKP 0.860346
GBP 0.860525
GEL 3.001364
GGP 0.860346
GHS 12.73731
GIP 0.860346
GMD 82.265015
GNF 9957.222306
GTQ 8.674121
GYD 237.865172
HKD 8.896202
HNL 30.419124
HRK 7.533676
HTG 148.650774
HUF 355.532968
IDR 20390.972522
ILS 3.390323
IMP 0.860346
INR 107.412214
IQD 1489.399775
IRR 1560305.219242
ISK 143.995791
JEP 0.860346
JMD 178.966528
JOD 0.804483
JPY 183.557825
KES 147.004256
KGS 99.232021
KHR 4550.25215
KMF 489.067593
KPW 1021.253949
KRW 1754.956024
KWD 0.350982
KYD 0.947492
KZT 553.047494
LAK 25177.687384
LBP 101813.413971
LKR 380.392802
LRD 206.920361
LSL 18.748586
LTL 3.350551
LVL 0.686385
LYD 7.295883
MAD 10.641205
MDL 20.015897
MGA 4749.923754
MKD 61.618184
MMK 2382.402869
MNT 4062.395049
MOP 9.181624
MRU 45.158289
MUR 54.704758
MVR 17.543099
MWK 1971.463995
MXN 19.965768
MYR 4.693277
MZN 72.505163
NAD 18.748586
NGN 1555.539326
NIO 41.834831
NOK 11.16751
NPR 172.232097
NZD 2.010627
OMR 0.436294
PAB 1.13697
PEN 3.848605
PGK 4.986295
PHP 69.663106
PKR 316.212885
PLN 4.286203
PYG 6930.889151
QAR 4.14459
RON 5.246631
RSD 117.35683
RUB 84.91191
RWF 1667.302672
SAR 4.261227
SBD 9.151613
SCR 15.49162
SDG 681.407095
SEK 11.087807
SGD 1.472948
SHP 0.847188
SLE 28.083939
SLL 23794.64456
SOS 649.808255
SRD 42.53297
STD 23486.540697
STN 24.431557
SVC 9.948612
SYP 125.423664
SZL 18.742403
THB 37.90784
TJS 10.54517
TMT 3.982889
TND 3.365435
TOP 2.732149
TRY 52.762158
TTD 7.719748
TWD 36.007693
TZS 2973.315071
UAH 51.0363
UGX 4161.543528
USD 1.134726
UYU 45.604454
UZS 13660.393781
VES 699.97317
VND 29881.878936
VUV 134.80369
WST 3.133707
XAF 654.153274
XAG 0.018565
XAU 0.000279
XCD 3.066654
XCG 2.049059
XDR 0.81356
XOF 654.153274
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.802505
ZAR 18.864031
ZMK 10213.895615
ZMW 20.395851
ZWL 365.381363
  • RBGPF

    0.9600

    61.3

    +1.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.1200

    21.96

    -0.55%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    31.21

    +1.22%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.11

    -0.23%

  • BCC

    -0.7400

    71.8

    -1.03%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4700

    18.16

    -2.59%

  • GSK

    1.3300

    52.07

    +2.55%

  • RIO

    -3.7800

    95.58

    -3.95%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    23.04

    +1.69%

  • NGG

    0.6000

    81.57

    +0.74%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    14.05

    -0.5%

  • BTI

    1.8400

    60.74

    +3.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.63

    -0.16%

  • AZN

    4.5900

    181.02

    +2.54%

  • BP

    -0.4500

    39.33

    -1.14%

How queen’s death followed a disinformation playbook
How queen’s death followed a disinformation playbook / Photo: SEBASTIEN BOZON - AFP

How queen’s death followed a disinformation playbook

The death of Queen Elizabeth II has laid bare a blueprint for how disinformation flourishes around major news events, with bad actors taking advantage to grab attention and sow confusion.

Text size:

As Britain mourned its longest reigning monarch, social media users shared digitally altered photos and other misleading content, blaming her death at 96 on causes other than old age -- including Covid-19 vaccines and Hillary Clinton.

But the misinformation tactics deployed after Buckingham Palace's announcement on September 8 were mainly old tricks remodeled to fit the current story and make falsehoods stick in people's minds.

Similar bogus claims spread after other big stories, such as Russia's war on Ukraine and Jeffrey Epstein's death, with the QAnon conspiracy movement also showing its hand.

"Familiarity leads to increased believability," said Gordon Pennycook, a behavioral scientist at the University of Regina, in Canada.

- Well-worn tactics -

Warning signs of disinformation sprang up as soon as the queen went under medical supervision, when imposter Twitter accounts disguised as news outlets published and relayed false updates on her status.

The pace accelerated once the palace announced her death.

"People all around the world were aware of and impacted by the queen's death, giving purveyors of misinformation a virtually limitless range of false narratives to choose from," said Dan Evon at the nonprofit News Literacy Project (NLP).

Among the deluge: a months-old video of dancers outside Buckingham Palace was passed off as an Irish celebration of the death. A fake social media post purported to show former US president Donald Trump claiming the queen knighted him. A manipulated photo made it look like Meghan Markle wore a T-shirt saying, "The Queen Is Dead."

Some blamed the queen's death on Covid-19 shots -- an allegation anti-vaccine advocates have made about well-known people who died, including actress Betty White and comedian Bob Saget.

Others named Clinton as the culprit, claiming the queen announced before dying that she had political dirt on the former US presidential candidate and secretary of state.

That made-up statement has been attributed to other world leaders. It is a long-running meme that plays off a conspiracy theory about the Clintons killing political opponents.

"When big events happen, people in different communities, particularly activists, try to figure out if there is an angle for them there," said Mike Caulfield, a research scientist at the University of Washington's Center for an Informed Public (CIP).

"For an anti-vaccine activist, they figure out if the death can be mapped to vaccines. For a (New World Order) conspiracy theorist, maybe they map to Clinton or Epstein."

Supporters of QAnon folded the queen's death into their beliefs about a cabal of child sex traffickers, floating a range of baseless claims and hailing the event as proof of the legitimacy of their movement.

"The royal family, given Prince Andrew's heavily reported connections with Jeffrey Epstein, have always been fodder for the QAnon crowd," said Rachel Moran, a postdoctoral scholar at the CIP.

One video popular in QAnon circles, which some supporters claimed showed a naked boy escaping Buckingham Palace, was actually an old promo for a fictional TV show.

But it spread on TikTok, one of several QAnon-adjacent narratives that reached the mainstream.

In the week after the queen's death, media intelligence firm Zignal Labs tracked more than 76,000 mentions of the late monarch that referenced Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell -- both convicted sex offenders -- on social media, websites, broadcast and traditional media.

Narratives linking the queen to pedophilia, Clinton and the vaccines were mentioned 42,000, 8,000 and 7,000 times, respectively.

- Avoiding misinformation -

The rolling news about the queen -- and her global influence -- explains some of the appeal of conspiracy theories about her death, said Karen Douglas, a social psychology professor at the University of Kent who studies why people believe such theories.

"Accepting mundane explanations for such a big event might be less convincing or appealing," she said.

But there are ways to resist falling for false information.

Media literacy organizations, including NLP and CIP, recommend cross-referencing online posts against trusted information sources and pausing before sharing.

"Even a few moments of reflection can often make a big difference," Pennycook said.

N.Kratochvil--TPP