Dubai Telegraph - Artemis II lunar mission draws flood of conspiracy theories

EUR -
AED 4.175552
AFN 72.766476
ALL 94.162098
AMD 417.226554
ANG 2.035648
AOA 1043.169984
ARS 1679.636802
AUD 1.644928
AWG 2.046559
AZN 1.92839
BAM 1.955047
BBD 2.284181
BDT 139.496304
BGN 1.922493
BHD 0.428616
BIF 3388.19249
BMD 1.136977
BND 1.471414
BOB 7.836708
BRL 5.905231
BSD 1.134143
BTN 107.003929
BWP 15.475839
BYN 3.227601
BYR 22284.755976
BZD 2.280982
CAD 1.614792
CDF 2580.938264
CHF 0.920495
CLF 0.026587
CLP 1046.394248
CNY 7.720645
CNH 7.732367
COP 3919.547483
CRC 516.189954
CUC 1.136977
CUP 30.1299
CVE 110.218696
CZK 24.259115
DJF 201.961371
DKK 7.474711
DOP 66.832805
DZD 151.71364
EGP 56.316417
ERN 17.05466
ETB 180.381436
FJD 2.576502
FKP 0.864046
GBP 0.861095
GEL 3.00102
GGP 0.864046
GHS 12.755641
GIP 0.864046
GMD 82.430365
GNF 9938.043459
GTQ 8.652403
GYD 237.290312
HKD 8.914414
HNL 30.380123
HRK 7.530884
HTG 148.229683
HUF 354.486503
IDR 20428.071971
ILS 3.391518
IMP 0.864046
INR 107.9276
IQD 1489.440323
IRR 1563400.698685
ISK 143.986411
JEP 0.864046
JMD 178.749622
JOD 0.806128
JPY 183.939063
KES 147.307059
KGS 99.429036
KHR 4559.279095
KMF 493.447827
KPW 1023.280009
KRW 1756.368857
KWD 0.352043
KYD 0.94512
KZT 549.658752
LAK 25087.404586
LBP 101564.518415
LKR 382.216151
LRD 206.406917
LSL 18.862653
LTL 3.357198
LVL 0.687746
LYD 7.283164
MAD 10.705207
MDL 20.130897
MGA 4835.075056
MKD 61.614805
MMK 2387.123574
MNT 4074.725728
MOP 9.158813
MRU 45.55903
MUR 54.790635
MVR 17.566605
MWK 1974.929588
MXN 19.897422
MYR 4.684233
MZN 72.659519
NAD 18.862627
NGN 1564.706343
NIO 41.624902
NOK 11.202746
NPR 171.205334
NZD 2.014667
OMR 0.437174
PAB 1.134124
PEN 3.890724
PGK 4.977128
PHP 69.735371
PKR 315.618218
PLN 4.285677
PYG 6930.301857
QAR 4.144273
RON 5.233052
RSD 117.356435
RUB 86.07175
RWF 1666.643804
SAR 4.269367
SBD 9.154888
SCR 15.49385
SDG 682.186179
SEK 11.066313
SGD 1.474626
SHP 0.848868
SLE 28.197192
SLL 23841.850618
SOS 648.14481
SRD 42.431636
STD 23533.135508
STN 24.490788
SVC 9.924005
SYP 125.672491
SZL 18.779028
THB 37.917899
TJS 10.48488
TMT 3.979421
TND 3.33987
TOP 2.737569
TRY 52.900029
TTD 7.702899
TWD 36.186007
TZS 2978.119975
UAH 50.996697
UGX 4196.237124
USD 1.136977
UYU 45.501085
UZS 13623.516284
VES 705.782081
VND 29925.24374
VUV 136.233463
WST 3.158268
XAF 655.684425
XAG 0.019648
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.072738
XCG 2.043977
XDR 0.815475
XOF 655.693071
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.311222
ZAR 18.725679
ZMK 10234.145868
ZMW 20.47076
ZWL 366.106241
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    22.046

    -0.09%

  • BCC

    2.1000

    79.76

    +2.63%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.48

    +1.74%

  • RIO

    1.0800

    95.11

    +1.14%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    51.89

    +1.54%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    83.42

    +0.71%

  • BP

    -0.1400

    37.72

    -0.37%

  • AZN

    2.6600

    185.68

    +1.43%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    30.92

    -0.74%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.2

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    18

    -0.89%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    21.93

    -0.41%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    13.86

    +0.36%

Artemis II lunar mission draws flood of conspiracy theories
Artemis II lunar mission draws flood of conspiracy theories / Photo: Handout - NASA/AFP

Artemis II lunar mission draws flood of conspiracy theories

From false claims that a historic lunar fly-by was staged in a movie studio to unfounded narratives that footage of the crew was AI-generated, the Artemis II mission has been clouded by a blizzard of misinformation.

Text size:

The falsehoods -- circulating across tech platforms including X, TikTok and Facebook -- have also added fresh fuel to a longstanding conspiracy theory that NASA's 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing was faked.

Hashtags such as "fake space" and "fake NASA" have gained traction online since NASA's lunar fly-by sent astronauts farther from Earth than any human before.

Among the falsehoods was an image, viewed over a million times on X, purporting to show the Artemis II crew floating before a green screen and facing film cameras -- suggesting their mission was staged in a studio, but in reality bore the hallmarks of AI manipulation.

Some users also shared a video showing text appearing through the mission's official mascot as purported proof the flight was staged.

But a digital forensics expert told AFP's fact-checkers that the anomaly was the result of a failed text overlay by a news station that had syndicated the official feed.

Unfounded claims that the Artemis II mission detected a mysterious moving object on the moon's surface also racked up millions of views across platforms.

The misinformation spread as four astronauts -- preparing on Friday for a high-stakes re-entry and splashdown -- captivated the world with stunning visuals from their fly-by of the Earth's natural satellite from aboard the Orion spacecraft.

- Internet Wild-West -

Once confined to the internet's fringes, conspiracy theories have moved squarely into the mainstream amid growing mistrust of public institutions and traditional media.

Scientific achievements such as the lunar mission present "very easy content for conspiracy influencers," said disinformation researcher Mike Rothschild.

"There are some people whose reflexive reaction to any kind of major event is to claim it's fake and staged, no matter what it is," Rothschild told AFP.

Many of them "pass themselves off as experts in science and physics because it's somehow more believable to their followers than just going with 'the official story.'"

The trend underscores a Wild West internet landscape that is largely bereft of guardrails as false narratives erode digital trust. Several tech platforms have gutted trust and safety teams and scaled back moderation, making them what researchers call a hotbed for misinformation.

Further sowing online confusion were claims that the entire Artemis II mission was a hoax powered by artificial intelligence tools.

The assertion underscores how the rise of cheap and widely available AI tools has given misinformation peddlers a handy incentive to cast doubt on authentic content -- a tactic researchers have dubbed as the "liar's dividend."

- 'Secret knowledge' -

The swirl of falsehoods has also bolstered one of the longest enduring conspiracy theories -- that NASA faked the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing, broadcasting visuals shot in a Hollywood studio.

The conspiratorial discourse has seeped into pop culture, becoming a plotline in movies like romantic comedy "Fly Me to the Moon" -- with Scarlett Johansson's character tasked with faking a moon landing -- and some celebrities also amplifying the claim.

"The moon landing is an example of a conspiracy that will not die," Timothy Caulfield, a misinformation expert from the University of Alberta in Canada, told AFP.

"These conspiracies are attractive for a host of reasons including that they are linked to the allure of having 'secret knowledge' or being aware of things others don't know."

Though easy to debunk, such theories persist as Artemis II comes decades after the previous lunar missions, events today's internet-savvy generation has little recollection of.

"In many ways, it is a testament to how hard it is for humans to travel to the moon -- after all, we did it from 1968 to 1972, and it has taken until 2026 to do it again. It makes many people wonder if it ever happened," space exploration expert Francis French told AFP.

"Right now we are seeing remarkable photographs and video of the Earth and the moon...These photos alone should remove doubt and show once again the amazing things humans are capable of."

burs-mja-ac/sla

Y.Rahma--DT