
False posts share AI-generated footage of fire caused by gas leak in Malaysia
The video, which was viewed more than 190,000 times, purportedly shows the fire and plumes of smoke wafting over nearby buildings.
"I am now at Putra Heights," says someone in Malay, referring to a residential area near Malaysia's capital Kuala Lumpur where a massive fire caused by a gas pipeline leak started on April 1 (archived link).
More than 100 people were injured by the fire, which started as residents were enjoying a public holiday for Eid celebrations in the Muslim-majority country.
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Screenshot of the false Facebook post, captured on April 8, 2025
Screenshots from the video were shared elsewhere in similar posts on Facebook here and here and on TikTok.
But the video circulating online differs from footage of the April 1 inferno and the surrounding area available on AFP's YouTube channel .
Google Street View imagery of Putra Heights also looks different to how it is depicted in the circulating video -- the buildings in the area are less densely packed, with more greenery surrounding them .
Shu Hu, head of Purdue University's Machine Learning and Media Forensics Lab, there are at least two clues that indicate the footage used in the circulating video was generated by AI (archived link).
He first pointed to cars seemingly passing through one another in the right lane of the road leading from the fire.
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Screenshots from the AI-generated video, showing cars seemingly passing through each other
He also said vehicles in the road's left lane "move at an unnaturally rapid speed".
"Initially, ; however, they quickly and inexplicably vanish from the scene."
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Screenshots from the AI-generated video, showing cars apparently to disappearing
While there is no foolproof method to spot AI-generated media, identifying watermarks and visual inconsistencies can help, as errors still occur despite the meteoric progress in generative AI.
AFP has debunked other posts that falsely presented AI generated images and videos here.

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