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An online Valentine's Day blooper

Updated on: 15 February,2011 06:18 AM IST  | 
Prachi Sibal |

While Bhagat Singh was actually hanged on March 23, 1931, social websites went into a tizzy spreading misinformation, and the likes of Samajwadi Party jumped on the bandwagon. Prachi Sibal reports

An online Valentine's Day blooper

While Bhagat Singh was actually hanged on March 23, 1931, social websites went into a tizzy spreading misinformation, and the likes of Samajwadi Party jumped on the bandwagon.









Ignorance: A screen shot of R Madhavan's Twitter page where he
retweeted a message urging people to spend a minute remembering the
freedom fightersu00a0 on this day.u00a0 Bhagat Singh who was martyred
on March 23, 1931


In a classic example of how Wikipedia and other powerful social websites can be used to spread misinformation, Valentine's Day started with 'Bhagat Singh' trending at number one position on Twitter in India.

The tweets and re-tweets on February 14 said Bhagat Singh, Rajguru and Sukhdev were hanged on this day. However, the actual date is March 23, 1931. Information of the same was altered on Wikipedia and posted on the Samajwadi Party's Facebook page and on Twitter pages of celebrities such as actor R Madhavan, which only helped spread this piece of misinformation like wildfire.

Breaking the hype?
The tweets kept pouring in until later in the day. Messages stating that February 14 must be remembered for the sacrifice of Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev and Rajguru first started the ball rolling. However, clarifications that this was just a "rumour" followed later in the day. Some people believed that this could even be a ploy to divert people's attention from the V-Day hype.

"People started editing wrong information on the page and altering the day to February 14 from March 23," said Tinu Cherian, Wikipedia administrator.

"I had to correct the facts and edit the settings to protect it from unregistered users altering it," he added.
Madhavan retweeted a message that urged people to spend a minute remembering the freedom fighters on this day. A similar message was posted on the Facebook page of the Samajwadi Party. Until last evening, the message had received two comments correcting the misinformation.

"Even I thought it was true, though I am not surprised it was just some misinformation. I forwarded a few messages that I received. Thankfully, I did not retweet any such material," said Moksh Juneja, social media expert.

Tweets on Bhagat Singh moved to the third slot in the evening, with Valentine's Day messages and Grammy Awards now taking the lead.

Sense prevails
"I was curious when I first saw the tweets. I later verified the information and tweeted that this wasn't true," said Santosh P, Tweeple and Digital advertising executive. "Similar rumours have spread on Twitter earlier too. Such sensational messages go viral quickly," he added.

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