Coronavirus Conspiracies Go Viral on WhatsApp as Crisis Deepens

WhatsApp has previously restricted the number of people to whom users can forward messages.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 20 March 2020 18:44 IST
Highlights
  • Coronavirus has been accompanied "infodemic" of misinformation
  • Twitter, Facebook barred users from posting misleading information
  • Content is hard to police on WhatsApp

WhatsApp has previously restricted the number of people to whom users can forward messages

On Sunday morning, a viral outbreak in the Dutch city of Utrecht infected more than 60 people in less than hour. Unlike the coronavirus, however, the infection happened on WhatsApp.

Messages telling people to drink hot soup to stop coronavirus, or to test for infection by holding their breath for 15 seconds, were shared between friends and relatives in a matter of minutes, contradicting official medical advice.

Advertisement

Ivonne Hoek, 63, said she received the message from a friend shortly after 11 am, who said they were sent it by a neighbour who works in a hospital. Alarmed, she promptly forwarded it to her two children. With the click of a button at 11:36, her son, Tim, sent it to his entire 65-person Frisbee team.

"I probably wouldn't have paid any attention to this if I'd seen it from a stranger on Facebook. But I trust my mum very much," 35-year-old told Tim van Caubergh told Reuters.

Advertisement

"I shared it because it came from a trusted source ... that is how these things happen."

The coronavirus crisis, which has killed almost 9,000 people worldwide and threatened economic misery for millions more, has been accompanied by what the World Health Organization (WHO) has called an "infodemic" of misinformation.

Advertisement

Twitter followed social media competitor Facebook on Wednesday in barring users from posting misleading information about the coronavirus, including denials of expert guidance and encouragement of fake treatments.

Chat content hard to police
But the rapid spread of one such message in the Netherlands shows the challenges faced by private chat platforms, such as text messages or Facebook-owned WhatsApp, where content is harder to police and often perceived as coming from a trusted source when shared by friends and family.

Advertisement

"I think there's a sense of security and community that exists in these group chats that gives anything shared there a mark of authenticity," said Anna-Sophie Harling, head of Europe for the US-based misinformation monitoring centre NewsGuard.

"People can quickly send and resend images, text and voice notes, and it all happens in private, making it really, really difficult to counteract those claims."

WhatsApp has previously restricted the number of people to whom users can forward messages after viral rumours on its platform triggered a wave of mass beatings and deaths in India in 2018.

WhatsApp, which has over 2 billion users worldwide, said on Wednesday it had partnered with the WHO and other UN agencies to launch a service for sharing official health guidance about coronavirus.

WhatsApp chief Will Cathcart said the platform had also donated $1 million to factchecking organisations "to support their life-saving work to debunk rumours."

Despite the moves and official warnings, viral messages touting conspiracy theories and phoney medical advice have continued to spread online, raising alarm about the supposed dangers of infection from 5G phone masts or eating ice cream.

Lisa-Maria Neudert, a researcher at Oxford University's Project on Computational Propaganda, said such misinformation could hamper efforts to control the spread of the virus.

"From my own experience, yes I do think this has an impact," she said. "I know educated people that are heeding inaccurate medical advice they have seen shared on social media and in private messages."

© Thomson Reuters 2020

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: WhatsApp, Coronavirus
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Nvidia's GeForce Now Cloud Gaming Service Is Finally Available in India
  2. HMD Asha 505 Render Leaked Revealing Lumia 830-Like Design
  3. OnePlus Is Reportedly Preparing to Withdraw From These Two Markets
  4. Acer Aspire 3 (2026) With an Intel Celeron N4500 Processor Debuts in India
  5. Redmi Note 17 Pro Launched With Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 and 9,000mAh Battery
  6. StepFun Unveils StepX Neo as World's First Agentic Smartphone
  7. Apple's iOS 27 Public Beta is Now Available to Download on Your iPhone
  8. Realme C100x India Launch Date Announced; Here's How Much It Might Cost
  9. Google Pixel 11 Series Gets Listed on the US FCC Database Ahead of Its Debut
  10. Redmi Note 17 With an 8,000mAh Battery Debuts at This Price
  1. Huawei Pura 90s Pro, Pura 90s Pro Max Launched With Kirin 9030S Chip, 6,000mAh Batteries: Price, Features
  2. Redmi Note 17 Launched With 8,000mAh Battery, 50-Megapixel Rear Camera: Price, Specifications
  3. UK Tokenisation Drive May Boost Annual Output by $44 Billion: Report
  4. Redmi Note 17 Pro Launched With Snapdragon 6s Gen 4 and 9,000mAh Battery: Price, Features
  5. Japan’s SBI VC Trade Expands Stablecoin Services With 3 Percent Lending Yield
  6. Meta Pulls Muse AI Image Feature Less Than a Week After User Backlash Highlights Privacy Risks
  7. HMD Asha 505 Surfaces Online With Lumia-Inspired Design, 5-Inch Display in New Leaked Renders
  8. Honor Robot Phone Leak Reveals Key Specifications Ahead of Long-Awaited Debut
  9. Acer Aspire 3 (2026) Launched in India With Up to 15.6-Inch Display, Intel Celeron N4500 Processor: Price, Features
  10. Realme C100x India Launch Date Announced; Leaked Image of Retail Box Hints at Price in India
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.