The photo pops up on-screen and your eyes nearly pop out of your head. Is that . . . a great white shark swimming on a flooded highway? The person who posted the photo says it was taken after Hurricane Harvey slammed Texas in August 2017.
You gasp and immediately share the picture with your friends. But guess what? You’ve just fallen for a hoax. Someone used photo-editing software to combine a picture of the fearsome creature with one of an empty, flooded road.
The phony shark photo often goes viral after big storms, and hundreds of thousands of people have liked or shared it. It’s just one example of a growing problem online: fake photos.
The photo pops up on-screen. Your eyes nearly pop out of your head. Is that . . . a great white shark swimming on a flooded highway? The person who posted the photo says it was taken after Hurricane Harvey slammed Texas in August 2017.
You gasp. You immediately share the picture with your friends. But guess what? You’ve just fallen for a hoax. Someone used photo-editing software. They combined a picture of the fearsome creature with one of an empty, flooded road.
The phony shark photo often goes viral after big storms. Hundreds of thousands of people have liked or shared it. It’s just one example of a growing problem online: fake photos.