Conservative pundits used low-quality video on social media platforms Tuesday to spread a false claim that President Joe Biden fell asleep during a memorial for Maui wildfire victims. 

Fox News host Sean Hannity was among those who shared low-resolution video on X, the social media app formerly known as Twitter. Hannity’s post was viewed more than 425,000 times within a few hours, and similar videos posted by others received thousands more views on YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. 

Higher-resolution video from the nonpartisan network C-SPAN shows that Biden looked downward for about 10 seconds while seated at a table. In that video, Biden watches someone who’s speaking, coughs, looks downward and then nods in agreement with the person speaking. Then he looks up again. He later delivered a speech to the same audience. 

The higher-resolution video shows that Biden kept his eyes open for most of the time he’s looking downward, but his open eyes are not clearly visible in the lower-quality videos. 

At least one member of Congress, Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, also shared the lower-resolution version in a post on X. Nehls’ office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

The posts on the country’s largest social media platforms, which largely appear to be spreading unchecked, are the latest test of how Silicon Valley will handle misinformation in the 2024 election cycle — and whether they will enforce their own policies.

Low-quality videos are an example of what some misinformation researchers call “cheap fakes”: media that can successfully mislead people through simple techniques, even amid growing concerns about more advanced ways to create misleading content through generative artificial intelligence. Another well-known example involved then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a video that someone slowed down to make it sound as if she was slurring her words. 

Asked for comment on the Maui videos, White House spokesperson Andrew Bates said in an email: “It’s unfortunate they feel the need to lie. Instead, they should join him in supporting the people of Maui.”

The misleading content of the social media posts dovetails with one of the nicknames, “Sleepy Joe,” that former President Donald Trump has used for Biden. 

Republicans aiming to defeat Biden in next year’s presidential election have often focused on signs of the president’s age, a concern that’s widespread even among Democrats. Biden, 80, has responded by increasingly cracking jokes about his age, while his advisers appear to be taking steps to minimize the job’s physical toll, including using fewer stairs

Trump, 77, has a wide lead in national and state polls over other Republicans for the party’s presidential nomination, although resistance within the party remains. 

The posts about Biden’s Maui visit are the latest attempt by right-wing media to bend the rules of social media platforms, especially tech billionaire Elon Musk’s X app. Last month, conservative pundits spread conspiracy theories without evidence about the drowning death of the Obama family’s personal chef. 

Although Musk has changed many of X’s rules since he bought it last year, X’s website still has a written policy against sharing misleading media

X did not immediately respond to an email request for comment on the Hannity video. Fox News, where Hannity has a show, also did not immediately respond to an email request. Hannity also did not immediately respond to a reply to his X post. 

Several videos on YouTube used the lower-resolution footage to allege that Biden fell asleep. One from pundit Tim Pool had 116,000 views, another from The Hill newspaper had 118,000 views, and a third from a self-described motorcycle enthusiast had 3,100 views. 

YouTube bans misleading content if it’s been “technically manipulated or doctored in a way that misleads users (beyond clips taken out of context) and may pose a serious risk of egregious harm.” It also has a policy of reducing the spread of “borderline” videos that come close to crossing its line but don’t. 

YouTube did not immediately respond to an email request for comment. Pool and The Hill also did not immediately respond. 

A post on Instagram from the account students4trump had 28,584 likes after about five hours Tuesday, according to the platform’s publicly viewable tally. The post paired the allegation that Biden fell asleep with the lower-quality video on a repeating loop. 

Meta, the company that owns Facebook and Instagram, has a written policy to remove “certain highly deceptive manipulated media,” but it says there’s no way to articulate a comprehensive list of what is prohibited and it relies on the advice of outside experts. 

Meta did not immediately respond to an email request for comment. 

On TikTok, a search of the app turned up numerous videos alleging that Biden fell asleep, again using low-resolution video. One of the posts, a video from the account user4794022699383, received more than 67,000 views. 

TikTok’s written policies disallow misleading content that may cause “societal harm,” although it doesn’t define that term. TikTok says it relies on outside fact-checkers such as PolitiFact and Reuters. 

TikTok said it had no immediate comment on the videos. 

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Men posed as U.S. marshals to avoid wearing masks at Florida resort, authorities say

Two men are accused of pretending to be federal marshals and flashing…

Facebook Parent to Shrink Some Offices as It Adapts to Hybrid Work

Listen to article (2 minutes) Meta Platforms Inc. plans to shrink some…

Microsoft Earnings Fall Amid Economic Concerns

Business Earnings Software giant’s revenue growth slowed to a more than six-year…

‘Signs of life’ on Venus might just be ordinary sulfur gas

The widely-publicized detection of phosphine gas on Venus – a possible “biosignature”…