In recent years, a large number of Twitter profiles with cliché names such as “Facts about the Universe, Interesting Facts about Animals” and giving false information have mushroomed. These accounts, which usually advertise betting, cause fake images to spread in order to get more likes and enlarge the pages.
Those who make these posts may really believe in these images, but the possibility that they have interaction anxiety outweighs. Because when they enlarge the page, they can sell for tens of thousands of liras or betting ads The more views they get, the more they earn.
The weird thing is that these types of posts that hundreds of thousands of people believe. Even a single tweet can get more than 50 thousand likes. Especially since the images below have been in circulation for several years, we wanted to convey the truth in order to warn those who believe in them.
This image shared with the claim of “a mountain resembling a sleeping woman” is actually a digital work of artist Jean-Michel Bihorel called “Winter Sleep”.
Although the name of the mountain in question is “Sleeping Woman Mountain” among the people, the view of the mountain from the top is actually like this:
A similar digital work is considered real and shared frequently.
A photoshop of Mount Segla in Norway was photoshopped by Michelle von Kalben.
A shared toy figurine mistook for a baby platypus:
Toy created by Vladimir Matic-Kurylev:
Accounts that see the baby platypus share are trying to get hit with another toy this time.
It consists of a toy sold on the e-commerce site:
This is what baby platypuses actually look like:
The ones in this photo, which is claimed to be a family of sloths, are actually just toys.
The white bat seen in the photo is also a toy made of felt and cotton.
An artist named Anna Yastrejembovskaya makes these and similar toys and sells them on e-commerce sites.
The claim that Atatürk drew an “Ideal Republic Village” project is often shared, but there is no truth to it.
This image is in Afet Inan’s book “The Principle of Statehood and the First Industrial Plan of the Republic of Turkey 1933” and “drawn by an unknown architect” being transferred. There is no evidence that the project was drawn by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.
This image, which is sometimes shared as Fethiye and sometimes Çeşme, is a montage contrary to what is claimed.
Created using a photo from Corniglia, Italy.
Two pigeons entered the frame, but with montage.
It is possible to come across two different photos separately.
The claim that the workers who made the shape of the brick-patterned world map are Turkish is shared from time to time.
A design created by workers in Mexico for an interior design firm.
It is embroidered on the wall of a shared office.
There is no cloud in the original of this image, which was put into circulation when there was a storm in Istanbul.
A montage by digital artist Brent Shavnore.
The original of the photograph belongs to Tacettin Ulaş.
The “Cave of Prohodna” in Bulgaria is popularly known as the “Eyes of God”. To emphasize this even more, the Moon was added to the original photo with the montage.
If the Moon were at this angle, it would appear much smaller in the photo.
Located in the Adriatic Sea in Croatia, Bavljenac Island does indeed resemble a fingerprint, but its story is made up.
The rocky island was cleared to make it suitable for agriculture, and these walls were built by those on the neighboring island to mark the boundary of their farmland.
Thus, the crops were protected against strong winds.
Both these are toys and there is no animal species called the Inari fox.
Inari is a god who rides foxes in Japanese mythology. The toys in the image are sold by a toy shop called Santaniel.
The phrase “get out of your way” doesn’t come from the cylinder that traffic cops used to keep watch in.
“Assembly or method of interlocking two partsThe tenon, which means “, has taken its place in our language as “going out of hand” by associating the separation of parts from each other with the irritability it will create. This idiom was in our language long before the objects in question were used by the police.
Two different tenons:
The reason police were nicknamed “mirrorless” is not because Renault 12 police cars did not have a right-hand mirror in the early 1970s.
It is seen that the word “mirrorless” was also used in literary works of the early 1920s. “ugly, nasty, unpleasant, harmful” It is known that the word defined as “police” was also used in literary works of the 1930s. Renault 12 began to arrive in Turkey in the early 1970s.
Note: We recommend that you do not follow, even mute or block accounts that spread such images by copy-pasting without research. You can also follow the various verification platforms we use while creating this content: Malumatfuruş, Accuracy Share, Confirmation
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