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    Home»Tech Trends»Be Wary of AI Videos as Hurricane Melissa Hits Jamaica. How to Spot a Fake
    Tech Trends

    Be Wary of AI Videos as Hurricane Melissa Hits Jamaica. How to Spot a Fake

    techmanager291@gmail.comBy techmanager291@gmail.comOctober 28, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    satellite image provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Hurricane Melissa churns northwest through the Caribbean Sea captured at 17:00Z on October 27, 2025.
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    As Category 5 Hurricane Melissa bears down on Jamaica with winds topping 180 mph, social media is being hit by a surge of AI-generated and misleading videos, showing catastrophic flooding, collapsing buildings and rescue scenes that never happened.

    Across X, TikTok, Instagram, WhatsApp and other social media platforms, fake clips spread quickly, racking up millions of views in hours. Many of these videos are spliced footage from past storms or clips created entirely with text-to-video AI tools. 

    AI Atlas logo

    CNET

    In times of crisis, like a dangerous and imminent natural disaster, these fake videos can create confusion, panic and distraction at a time when accuracy can be life-saving.

    Natural disasters have always bred rumors and recycled footage, but the rise of AI-generated video has supercharged the problem. Tools like OpenAI’s Sora and other AI-video platforms can render realistic-looking images of storms, floods and damage scenes in seconds, reaching millions online in just a few hours. 

    Read more: The Deepfakes Are Winning. How Can You Tell if a Video Is Real or Sora AI?


    Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.


    Why storms are a magnet for fake news

    Storms are visual, emotional and fast-moving, which is the perfect recipe for viral misinformation. In years past, videos were often taken out of context or labeled as a different storm. Now, they can be digitally fabricated from scratch. 

    Some depict apocalyptic flooding that hasn’t occurred, while others claim to show “real-time” conditions hours before landfall. Several videos that have circled this week include images of sharks swimming in the storm surge and unsettling depictions of human suffering. 

    False videos like these can exaggerate the danger of the storm, create panic, undermine trust and distract emergency responders, as misinformation pulls attention from verified reports. 


    The following three videos are all fake. They are labeled (albeit briefly) with the Sora watermark, which indicates they were made in OpenAI’s video generator.

    How to separate truth from fiction online

    When social feeds fill with dramatic hurricane clips, it’s important to separate truth from fiction. 

    “You have to be very discerning,” Sen. Dana Morris Dixon, Jamaica’s information minister, said. “You have to know what is good information from bad information. If you want to know where the storm is going, if you want to know what to do, you need to look for official sources.” 

    Dixon highlighted that the Jamaica Information Service, Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management’s information sites and the Office of the Prime Minister page are resources for legitimate, timely updates. 

    Here are some ways to be discerning. 

    Check the source. If the video comes from an unfamiliar account, lacks a timestamp or carries no recognizable media branding, assume it is fake until verified. Also, look for the Sora watermark indicating it was made in OpenAI’s app, or read the comments to see if someone else has flagged the video as fake. 

    Ask yourself if it’s new and local. Does the geography match Jamaica? Is the footage recent? Many “Melissa” clips could actually be from past Caribbean or Gulf storms.

    Cross-check before believing. Confirm through trusted outlets, like the Meteorological Service of Jamaica and the US National Hurricane Center, or established media like the BBC, Reuters or the Associated Press.

    Pause before sharing. A viral video can cause harm if it spreads misinformation. Wait until a credible source verifies it before reposting.

    Go local. If you’re in the affected area, rely on local emergency agencies, radio stations and city or county-level officials for evacuation and safety updates. 

    Monitor official alerts. For real-time instructions, stick with government channels and local emergency feeds. Your safety depends on accurate information, not viral content. 

    As AI-generated media becomes easier to produce, hurricanes like Melissa offer a preview of a new reality: one in which you can’t trust much of the information you see online. 

    Staying safe means being skeptical and diligent when looking for accurate and even lifesaving news. 

    Read more: What Is AI Slop? Everything to Know About the Terrible Content Taking Over the Internet

    fake Hits hurricane Jamaica Melissa Spot Videos Wary
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