John Oliver has put an end to a viral Facebook copyright hoax with a
Facebook post of his own, and even managed to get Mark Zuckerberg's
approval.
The presenter of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver addressed his audience over a viral Facebook status which was recently revealed as a hoax.
The hoax status urges users to share the 'declaration' on their page to make them exempt from new changes that allow Facebook to own everything users have personally posted.
The presenter of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver addressed his audience over a viral Facebook status which was recently revealed as a hoax.
The hoax status urges users to share the 'declaration' on their page to make them exempt from new changes that allow Facebook to own everything users have personally posted.
The video, which has only been shared on Facebook, sees Oliver mock the status, telling the audience "posting this message will accomplish nothing." He also highlights the 'legal clause' the post references, which in some versions misspells 'statute' for 'statue.'
British-born Oliver pokes fun at the status, saying the only way to really avoid the fake Facebook changes is by re-posting the satirical video message, which Oliver says, is stated "under the social media copyright act of 1934."
THE FACEBOOK PRIVACY PROTECTION MESSAGES ARE HOAXES! WATCH THIS VIDEO TO HEAR JOHN OLIVER EXPLAIN HOW TO ACTUALLY PROTECT YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION.
Posted by Last Week Tonight with John Oliver on Wednesday, September 30, 2015
The video has been shared close to 90,000 times, even receiving the seal of approval from Facebook's CEO Mark who 'liked' the video on the programme's page.
The hoax status is thought to have been shared thousands of times over recent weeks, despite various versions of the post being in existence for two years.
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