{"id":1065,"date":"2009-07-24T13:25:52","date_gmt":"2009-07-24T18:25:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/2009\/07\/24\/top-15-web-hoaxes-of-all-time\/"},"modified":"2009-07-24T13:25:52","modified_gmt":"2009-07-24T18:25:52","slug":"top-15-web-hoaxes-of-all-time","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2009\/07\/24\/top-15-web-hoaxes-of-all-time\/","title":{"rendered":"Top 15 Web Hoaxes of All Time"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Written by Josh Catone<\/a><\/p>\n Sometimes it’s hard to tell what to believe when you read it on the web. The recent “Unknown Lifeform<\/a>” in North Carolina? Turns out, not a hoax, but also not a monster. But all those rumors about Jeff Goldblum falling to his death<\/a> in New Zealand? Well, those were a hoax, and a rather tasteless one at that.<\/p>\n For hundreds of years, humans have been playing elaborate tricks on each other, but the advent of social tools – from Usenet and email right on up to YouTube and Twitter – means that hoaxes are much more easily spread, and it can be difficult to separate the misinformation from the truth. Here’s a collection of the top 15 most unforgettable web hoaxes.<\/p>\n Actually, the hoax status of this one still seems somewhat up-in-the-air. It started with a newspaper article from a local paper in Montauk, New York in July 2008. A creature had washed up on the beach; it was dead, and it was really strange – no one knew what it was. Thus, the “Montauk Monster<\/a>” was born.<\/p>\n Even today, no one really seems to know what it is. A raccoon? A rodent? A capybara? A boxer dog? A sea turtle without its shell? Whatever it is, the Montauk Monster was an instant Internet sensation, and it has sparked an almost unending debate over whether this is just another hoax or something that Mulder and Scully need to investigate.<\/p>\n
\n1. The Montauk Monster (2008)<\/h2>\n
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\n2. How to Charge an iPod with an Onion (2007)<\/h2>\n
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