Artemis II Faces of Wave of Conspiracy Theories, AI Videos Ahead of Friday Splashdown
NASA says the far side was naturally sunlit and that many viral moon images online were AI-generated, edited or taken from Earth.
- As the Artemis II mission captures global attention, social media platforms are flooded with fabricated AI videos and stolen astrophotography falsely presented as real footage from the Orion spacecraft.
- Sophisticated AI video models and the theft of authentic imagery from Texas-based astrophotographer Adam Jackson have fueled this trend, with bad actors mining social channels to misappropriate detailed lunar captures.
- Fabricated clips often contain impossible visuals, such as the moon rotating or showing incorrect crew compositions, yet SpaceX CEO Elon Musk inadvertently reshared misleading posts featuring these fakes.
- Observers note synthetic content typically features short, eight-to-15-second clips, inconsistent artifacts, and distribution by low-authority accounts with histories of sharing engagement bait.
- Fortunately, NASA continues to release breathtaking, authentic visuals from the mission; the agency encourages the public to view official updates through its dedicated image and video library.
34 Articles
34 Articles
Artemis II broadcast error used to stoke false claims mission was staged
NASA's historic lunar fly-by in April 2026 sent astronauts farther from Earth than any human before, but social media users stirred up conspiracy theories the mission was staged -- sharing a video of text appearing through the trip's official mascot as proof. A digital forensics expert told AFP the anomaly was a failed text overlay by the news station that syndicated the official feed, which showed the plush toy remained solid throughout.
Along with the first human flight to the moon in more than 50 years, fake images and news from there began to appear on social networks
Conspiracy Theorists Are Already Trying (And Failing) to Discredit the Artemis II Mission
The professional conspiracy theorists of the modern Internet who make their rent by venting some absurd lies about long-settled science to profit off of fear mongering are, as to be expected, out in full force. They’ve been upset ever since NASA’s Artemis II mission successfully looped its crew around the moon to get a close-up look at its surface before turning around and heading home. Their latest conspiracy theory? Confusion over how the far …
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