Viral "fried Luo Han" story outed to be fake, reminds us how gullible people still are

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If you have not yet encountered a tragic story, how does an ocean fish encounter an untimely death in the hands of a careless servant, here is.

First released on the local site for all Singapore things yesterday morning (December 27), a brief sharing of how an owner came home to discover that his pet Lohan fish was fried and served for dinner.

This post immediately spreads on social media, with more than 22,000 likes, shares and reviews as a combination of local netizens expressing regret for a collective sigh in one of Singapore’s most precious fish losses.

Photo: All Singapore Stuff Facebook

While some netizens took the side of the domestic maid with encouraging statements on how it was simply an honest mistake, others were a lot less tolerant, inciting remarks that border on racism.

Photo: All Singapore Stuff Facebook

But if you had been paying close attention to the comments in the original All Singapore Stuff’s Facebook post, you would notice that some observant individuals were calling it out as fake news.

Photo: All Singapore Stuff Facebook

When the post was shared by MGAG this afternoon (Dec 28), it was quickly followed by a complete debunking by one Javier Loke, who proceeded to break down exactly how fake news could be engineered.

A simple Google search of the fried pet fish also landed me at the Instagram of one Vi Sick, where the photo had been posted 35 weeks ago. In the comments section, he also admits that he had snagged the photo from the Internet.

on Facebook

家裡新請來一位印尼女傭,我打電話吩咐她把家裡新鮮的魚拿來炸下等下回去吃。回去之後,看到的結果是她把我弟養的羅漢給炸了😵請問我該怪我自己還是那位印尼女傭😞

Posted by Pauline Pau on Sunday, 25 December 2016

While these sort of stories may not appear of much consequence, it does reflect a worrying issue – that it is way too easy to lead people by the nose with a crude cobbling together of fake news.

Given the slew of fake news fiascos that marred the course of the US elections, the problem is that fake news can appear to the general public as just another way to undermine politicians, until it escalates into a shooting that endangers real human lives.

Fortunately, Singapore has yet to see its fake news scandals breaking out into chaos, but this does not mean that we are immune to potential fear-mongering topics, or in this case, hate-mongering ones.

If anything sounds fishy or too far-fetched to be true, it probably is.

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Thursday, December 29, 2016 – 12:44
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