Berliner Boersenzeitung - US hoax trials spotlight misinformation profiteer

EUR -
AED 4.228705
AFN 73.118499
ALL 96.103901
AMD 434.081157
ANG 2.061193
AOA 1055.880308
ARS 1597.90835
AUD 1.677865
AWG 2.072611
AZN 1.953004
BAM 1.956906
BBD 2.319081
BDT 141.279852
BGN 1.968185
BHD 0.43404
BIF 3420.2886
BMD 1.151451
BND 1.482719
BOB 7.985756
BRL 6.032105
BSD 1.151446
BTN 109.143271
BWP 15.876041
BYN 3.427452
BYR 22568.435737
BZD 2.315689
CAD 1.599498
CDF 2628.196196
CHF 0.919439
CLF 0.026922
CLP 1063.042764
CNY 7.958655
CNH 7.969226
COP 4230.453279
CRC 534.695246
CUC 1.151451
CUP 30.513446
CVE 110.335507
CZK 24.525959
DJF 205.031433
DKK 7.47238
DOP 68.537249
DZD 153.651843
EGP 60.778062
ERN 17.271762
ETB 177.994138
FJD 2.599283
FKP 0.866711
GBP 0.86805
GEL 3.085921
GGP 0.866711
GHS 12.616624
GIP 0.866711
GMD 84.633244
GNF 10095.574529
GTQ 8.812708
GYD 241.033559
HKD 9.01799
HNL 30.570615
HRK 7.536475
HTG 150.930719
HUF 389.882386
IDR 19556.240437
ILS 3.612815
IMP 0.866711
INR 107.314175
IQD 1508.372185
IRR 1512142.7665
ISK 143.597324
JEP 0.866711
JMD 181.238501
JOD 0.816389
JPY 183.986924
KES 149.562106
KGS 100.694589
KHR 4611.486276
KMF 492.820691
KPW 1036.309131
KRW 1739.410315
KWD 0.354543
KYD 0.959555
KZT 556.661878
LAK 25043.045647
LBP 103109.525503
LKR 362.703426
LRD 211.294104
LSL 19.771975
LTL 3.399935
LVL 0.696501
LYD 7.349995
MAD 10.76191
MDL 20.224431
MGA 4798.649697
MKD 61.675663
MMK 2416.702495
MNT 4111.995092
MOP 9.290472
MRU 45.973385
MUR 53.853729
MVR 17.789674
MWK 1996.50242
MXN 20.837356
MYR 4.631082
MZN 73.63564
NAD 19.772233
NGN 1590.9366
NIO 42.373398
NOK 11.22022
NPR 174.612901
NZD 2.008729
OMR 0.443681
PAB 1.151466
PEN 4.010967
PGK 4.975747
PHP 69.907997
PKR 321.353848
PLN 4.283374
PYG 7528.091448
QAR 4.1982
RON 5.097815
RSD 117.467923
RUB 93.858843
RWF 1681.413833
SAR 4.320822
SBD 9.26001
SCR 17.330464
SDG 692.022259
SEK 10.898769
SGD 1.483022
SHP 0.863886
SLE 28.267808
SLL 24145.360077
SOS 658.057648
SRD 43.2957
STD 23832.70685
STN 24.513536
SVC 10.074826
SYP 127.267156
SZL 19.769831
THB 37.813065
TJS 11.002483
TMT 4.030078
TND 3.39494
TOP 2.772417
TRY 51.200444
TTD 7.823388
TWD 36.777085
TZS 2970.7434
UAH 50.469568
UGX 4289.554854
USD 1.151451
UYU 46.609582
UZS 14042.119569
VES 538.79648
VND 30321.729719
VUV 137.466441
WST 3.195833
XAF 656.3137
XAG 0.016374
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.111854
XCG 2.0752
XDR 0.816368
XOF 656.3137
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.738212
ZAR 19.724796
ZMK 10364.442021
ZMW 21.675063
ZWL 370.766689
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    0.1400

    74.43

    +0.19%

  • JRI

    -0.2700

    11.8

    -2.29%

  • GSK

    -0.1000

    53.84

    -0.19%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.77

    -0.22%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    22.66

    -0.4%

  • NGG

    -0.4800

    81.92

    -0.59%

  • AZN

    5.0200

    188.42

    +2.66%

  • RELX

    -0.1000

    31.97

    -0.31%

  • RIO

    0.8500

    86.64

    +0.98%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    25.25

    -0.87%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    14.65

    -4.03%

  • VOD

    -0.1400

    14.49

    -0.97%

  • BTI

    0.3749

    57.8

    +0.65%

  • BP

    0.5100

    46.68

    +1.09%

US hoax trials spotlight misinformation profiteer
US hoax trials spotlight misinformation profiteer / Photo: Joe Buglewicz - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

US hoax trials spotlight misinformation profiteer

American radio host Alex Jones reaped millions spouting conspiracy-laden falsehoods that helped drive up sales of products like libido boosters, exploiting an internet ecosystem that experts say makes misinformation a lucrative business.

Text size:

Jones, a serial provocateur who founded the far-right website InfoWars, has been ordered to pay nearly $1.5 billion in damages for calling a 2012 mass shooting in an elementary school –- which left 20 first graders and six adults dead -- a "hoax."

Defamation cases in Texas and Connecticut against Jones have spotlighted the challenge of curbing misinformation on the internet, where false and inflammatory content often spreads faster, generates more engagement -- and more revenue -– than the truth.

"The modern internet business model consists of building an audience and then monetizing that audience, either through ads, merchandise sales, or direct donation," Danny Rogers, cofounder of the nonprofit Global Disinformation Index, told AFP.

"Alex Jones perfected that model by peddling the most adversarial narratives in the form of virulent conspiracy theories and unbridled anger, building a receptive audience, and then soaking that audience for profit."

Jones, who was back in the spotlight this week when rapper Kanye West declared his admiration for Adolf Hitler on his show, has amassed what experts call a fortune by successfully merging the conspiracy theories with merchandise and dietary supplements from his InfoWars store.

Jones has hawked male vitality supplements and testosterone boosters, while claiming the government was feminizing men or turning them gay by using chemical pollutants.

He accused the government of deliberately putting fluoride in drinking water, while his store peddled fluoride-free toothpaste.

His audience, he claimed, can survive various doomsday scenarios with other products that his store can supply -- storable food, body armor and even components for homemade guns.

- Bankruptcy -

The extent of his wealth is opaque but a forensic economist testified during the Texas trial that the combined net worth of Jones and Free Speech Systems –- the parent company of Infowars –- likely fell between $135 million and $270 million.

But while bashing the trials as an assault on free speech, Jones has said he has little money to pay the damages and has repeatedly implored his audience for donations.

As he battled the defamation cases, an anonymous bitcoin donor sent Jones cryptocurrency worth $8 million, the nonprofit Southern Poverty Law Center reported in May.

This week, Jones declared personal bankruptcy in his home state of Texas, saying his liabilities far exceeded his assets that were worth between $1 million and $10 million.

InfoWars declared bankruptcy in April and Free Speech Systems filed for bankruptcy in July.

Last month, the Washington Post reported that Jones had transferred millions of dollars out of Free Speech Systems to firms that he or his family members controlled, citing financial records.

Families of the victims in the 2012 shooting in Sandy Hooks Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, have alleged that Jones was trying to hide his wealth to avoid paying the damages.

A jury in Connecticut awarded $965 million in October to relatives of eight Sandy Hook victims and an FBI agent. The judge later tacked on an additional $473 million in punitive damages.

In a separate trial, a jury in Texas ordered Jones to pay nearly $50 million damages to a couple whose six-year-old son was killed in the shooting.

Free Speech Systems and Jones did not respond to a request for comment.

- 'Clicks and cash' -

The families of the school shooting victims say they were harassed and threatened for years by Jones's fans, with strangers showing up at their homes to confront them and hurling abuse online. Some even reported receiving rape and death threats.

"Their children got slaughtered -- I saw it myself," Bill Aldenberg, the FBI agent, said in an emotionally charged testimony during the Connecticut trial in September.

"And these people (Jones and company) made millions upon millions. They've destroyed everybody and they don't give a damn."

InfoWars sales data presented during the Connecticut trial showed a major spike in revenue after Jones peddled a new lie about the school shooting.

On September 25, 2014, when he falsely claimed that an FBI report showed that "no one died in 2012 in Sandy Hook" his site's daily revenue jumped to more than $230,000, according to the data published by the Huffington Post.

On the previous day, before he peddled that claim, the site made only $48,000.

That underscores, what experts say, is the financial incentive of content creators to push out conspiratorial material that has potential to go viral.

"The fundamental problem is larger than Jones and is really the business model itself and its toxic externalities," said Rogers.

"This creates an entire world of Alex Jones polarizing the global discourse, sowing fear and anger for clicks and cash. Until this changes, we'll simply go from one Alex Jones to the next and little will change."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)