
Fact check: Making money out of Myanmar's quake disaster
This article is published as part of The Globe's initiative to cover disinformation and misinformation. E-mail us to share tips or feedback at disinfodesk@globeandmail.com.
Profiteers have flooded social media with fake news and bogus videos since a powerful earthquake devastated Myanmar last month, exploiting the chaos with clickbait that can reap tens of thousands in ad revenues, digital activists say.
Be it sensational images that go viral or fake rescue tales, the schemes prey on the heightened fears and appetite for news that follow any disaster or outbreak of war.
'People just have to assume there's a lot of false information that circulates. They should be aware there are people making money off of false information,' said Darrell West, a senior technology researcher at the Brookings Institution think-tank.
The death toll from Myanmar's March 28 quake has risen to more than 3,600, according to state media, with a further 5,000 injured and hundreds of people still missing.
The quake was the latest blow for the impoverished Southeast Asian country of 53 million, following a 2021 coup that returned the military to power and devastated its economy after a decade of development and tentative democracy.
Grassroots group Digital Insight Lab, which runs Facebook pages countering misinformation and hate speech in Myanmar, said it had seen viral posts claiming to show the devastation of the disaster even though the videos were shot in Syria and Malaysia, or created from scratch by artificial intelligence.
'Many of these reports repurpose photos and videos from unrelated past incidents, while others leverage AI-generated content to fabricate false narratives,' said research officer Windy, who used a pseudonym for safety.
'When you have mis- and disinformation, it can escalate panic, you can delay your evacuation. It can undermine the trust that you have in emergency services. It can also be really distracting,' said Jeanette Elsworth, head of communications at the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR).
After Hurricane Helene devastated parts of the United States last year, false rumours spread accusing the government of channelling federal disaster funds to illegal migrants.
When a massive quake hit Turkey and Syria in 2023, killing more than 51,000 people, fraudsters uploaded old videos of tsunamis in Japan and Greenland, claiming it was real-time footage from the new disaster zone.
'We have a Wild West now where virtually anything goes. There are very few laws regulating content online, and the tech companies aren't doing very much to protect people,' Mr. West, of the Brookings Institution, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
More than US$20-billion was made in 2024 through advertising revenues shared between social platforms and content creators, according to tech policy group What To Fix.
Content creators use platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and TikTok to get a share of revenue from the ads displayed with their posts, said founder Victoire Rio, who has also worked in Myanmar researching misinformation.
She said the model incentivizes creators to produce viral posts, even if they are false or AI-generated, because the more views and shares they attract, the more money they make.
Though it is difficult to calculate an exact figure, fraudsters have been able to earn tens of thousands of dollars during previous crises such as the 2021 Myanmar coup, Ms. Rio said.
A 2021 study by fact-checking firm NewsGuard and analytics company Comscore said misinformation websites reap US$2.6-billion from digital advertising each year.
Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, accounts for more than 60 per cent of the social advertising market and had over 3.1 million creator accounts in 2024, a 55-per-cent increase on the previous year, according to What To Fix.
'In the current context in Myanmar, a vast volume of the disinformation you're seeing circulate is financially motivated,' Ms. Rio said.
Meta said they remove posts that violate their policies, working with partners to debunk false claims and move such content down the feed 'so fewer people see it.'
In January, Meta scrapped its U.S. fact-checking programs and shifted its approach to managing political content.
TikTok said it bans misleading and false content on its platform and pro-actively removed inaccurate posts after the Myanmar quake, directing users to credible sources.
It said it has trained moderators and fact-checking partners working in 50+ languages.
Ms. Rio said the lack of information coming out of Myanmar due to internet shutdowns was also fuelling misinformation.
'You have a huge community of people that are turning to Facebook from outside of Myanmar trying to find information. And those people are particularly vulnerable to misinformation because they are desperately looking for information,' Ms. Rio said.

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