Costco lighttable
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It might have been misleading, and the comments it attracted even more so. The tapeworm post, like the news reports of the man in San Fransisco who developed a giant tapeworm thanks to a daily diet of raw salmon, was not fake. While some hoaxes can be completely debunked, a greater amount of content, including from mainstream sources, often gets the basic idea right but some details wrong or omitted.” We have already launched work enabling our community to flag hoaxes and fake news, and there is more we can do here.”īut he went on to admit “the ‘truth’ is complicated. “Our goal is to show people the content they will find most meaningful, and people want accurate news. “….We don’t want any hoaxes on Facebook,” Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg said in as September post on his page. “Sorry, this content isn’t available right nowįacebook has been in a battle against “fake news,” but it was unclear whether the posts removed had anything to do with that.
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When some of the posts went down, this appeared in their place: Still, the posts were not good news for salmon marketers from Alaska or anywhere elsewhere. Ironically, farmed fish are now largely fed pelleted food which makes it highly unlikely they will end up with parasites. Parasites are picked up from wild prey. The good news for Alaska commercial fishermen is that judging by Facebook comments many thought the wormy fish were farmed salmon, not wild fish. The comments on that post and the other were predictable: “f-–g disgusting” and lots of vomiting emoticon. The Facebook post is labeled with some sort of crown logo, the origin of which could not be determined.Īlong with the more than 17 million views on that post, the Vegan News reported 4.2 million views and 82,680 shares on its wormy salmon post. The newer Facebook post, which starts with Ryerson’s youtube video and continues for another minute with footage of worms being removed from a white-fleshed fish of indeterminate species, got a lot more traction. The youtube video, in turn, comes from a Sammy Ryerson “Live worm in Costco salmon” report in 2015. That report attracted fewer than 110,000 views. The start of the Vegan video features the same youtube video of Costco coho, but the Vegan News post is a minute shorter than the newer Facebook post. Whether the latest post had its origins there, however, is unclear. The Vegan News appeared to have jumped the merry-go-round early. Wolfensen, or someone acting on her behalf, took the page down very late on Thursday night, and it became unavailable on the Mend It page as well, but it was still playing on the page of Taylor Adher in London and Freedom Crystal Jefferson in California who got it from Lisa Samuel in England and David Wong who shared 翁靜晶‘s post and the Vegan News and who knows how many others. Wolfensen said it came to her page from yet another friend. Orlando Gonzales, the site administrator for Mend It, said the video was shared by a Facebook friend of the site who knew Renee Wolfenson in Los Angeles. By nightfall Thursday, the count was up over 17 million and steadily growing. Where the post featuring a worm wiggling out of a coho salmon filet originated was unclear, as is the case with so many shared Facebook posts, but it was spreading like a virus.īy the time it popped up on “Mend It,” a site for Alaska anglers on Thursday morning, Facebook reported it had already been viewed by more than 14 million people. Apparently thanks to a California man who pulled a 5-foot, 6-inch tapeworm out of his ass in January, Facebook was this week blowing up with a visually distasteful warning not to eat salmon.
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