Bloggers catch news outlets fooled by crash photos hoax

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/media/story/2009/06/22/news-fooled-hoax-photo-crash.html


The return of an online photo hoax hooked several news outlets in
recent days, with a Dutch radio station and TV channels in Bolivia and
Poland falling for images purportedly captured just before the crash
of Air France Flight 447.

Bolivian station PAT, Poland's TVN24 and BNR of Netherlands are among
the outlets that received the dramatic images — allegedly depicting
the aircraft being torn apart and a passenger being sucked out of the
plane — and proceeded to use them on-air, according to internet
bloggers and commentary sites.

"On Thursday, two photographs were aired on our prime-time news report
and on Friday we apologized," Eddy Luis Franco, news director for the
privately owned PAT television station, told Agence France-Presse on
Monday.

An email message accompanying the hoax images claimed that a passenger
on the Air France flight had taken the pictures seconds before the
plane crashed into the Atlantic.

Air France Flight 447 crashed in the ocean off the northeast coast of
Brazil on the night of May 31. All 228 people aboard were killed.

The photos actually depict footage from the pilot episode of the hit
U.S. television drama Lost (fans of the show pointed out that Canadian
actress Evangeline Lilly is seen in the bottom left of the photos) and
have previously turned up as part of an online hoax.

Similar claims were made in the fall of 2006 when the images were
distributed widely via email following the mid-air collision between
Gol Airlines Flight 1907, a jetliner, and an Embraer Legacy executive
jet over Brazil.

Though the Embraer was able to land at an airstrip, the larger plane
crashed in the Amazon jungle and its crew and all passengers aboard
were killed.

At that time, an email accompanying the same photos alleged that they
were taken by a brave passenger on the Gol flight who had managed to
snap the shots before the crash. It was alleged that recovery
officials found the pictures on a digital camera's memory stick
discovered among the wreakage.

However, a Brazilian blogger writing under the name Cardoso admitted
to perpetuating the 2006 hoax.

He said he constructed an error-filled email with "obviously fake"
images to prove that most people today seek out unbelievable footage
or images in the news, choose to accept conspiracy theories and don't
take the time to question or think critically about the source of
information.

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