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team@truti.me

@TruTimeTeam

Building TruTime- a protective verification ledger for digital content. Anchored to proof, Focused on truth.

Beigetreten Şubat 2026
12 Folgt4 Follower
team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
@fcheckmaster The amount of media being deceptively edited and misrepresented is growing at an extreme rate. Keeping the record and context accessible is important, more now than ever .
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Fact Check Master
Fact Check Master@fcheckmaster·
🚨Fake News Alert: Indian RAW propaganda accounts are falsely claiming an “Afghan drone strike near Nasir Bagh, Peshawar.” This claim is completely fake. The image being circulated is actually from Pakistan Air Force strike footage in Kabul, targeting the Intelligence Directorate of the Afghan Ministry of Defense and related military infrastructure in response to unprovoked terrorist and military attacks from Afghan soil. This is another desperate disinformation attempt by Indian propaganda networks to shield the Afghan Taliban regime.
Fact Check Master tweet media
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
What is a TruTime Record? Each TruTime record is designed to anchor media to the original event and build context around it. A record can include: • the original full recording • timestamps showing where viral clips originated • an edit archive linking shortened clips or altered versions circulating online • categorization of those clips (context removed, quote mutation, misleading caption, etc.) • community annotations where users can add notes tied to specific timestamps • links to reporting or additional sources The idea is to create a reference page for the event itself. TruTime doesn’t decide what people should believe. It preserves the record behind media so anyone can compare viral fragments to the event they came from. It's true Interpretations will always exist. But ideally, they should follow the record, not outrun it.
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
What is a TruTime Record? Each TruTime record is designed to anchor media to the original event and build context around it. A record can include: • the original full recording • timestamps showing where viral clips originated • an edit archive linking shortened clips or altered versions circulating online • categorization of those clips (context removed, quote mutation, misleading caption, etc.) • community annotations where users can add notes tied to specific timestamps • links to reporting or additional sources The idea is to create a reference page for the event itself. TruTime doesn’t decide what people should believe. It preserves the record behind media so anyone can compare viral fragments to the event they came from. It's true Interpretations will always exist. But ideally, they should follow the record, not outrun it.
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
Claim: A post circulating on X from an account impersonating White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt claims Muslims were “invading churches in Minnesota.” Record: The video appears to originate from an event in Australia in 2025, not Minnesota. The footage itself is real, but the context attached to it is incorrect, and the account sharing it is not an official White House account. This is a common misinformation pattern: Real video + false location or event description + impersonation of an official source = misleading narrative. The original footage is linked in the comments for comparison. Situations like this show why preserving the record behind media matters — where it was filmed, when it occurred, and what the original event actually was. That’s the type of reference problem systems like TruTime aim to address. [Original linked below]
𝔉🅰𝒏 Karoline Leavitt@WHLeavitt

Muslims are invading churches in Minnesota, shouting praises to Allah, and intimidating Christians into fleeing out of fear of violence. Do you support deporting all Islamic agitators and rejecting all Islamic refugees? A. Hell yeah B. No

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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
Good catch @PTI_News A manipulated video of India’s Defence Minister Rajnath Singh has been circulating online claiming he expressed support for Israel against Iran. [Full link below] Multiple fact-checks have confirmed the clip is a deepfake. What investigators found: • The audio was generated using AI voice cloning • The visuals come from a real speech at the Sindhi Samaj Sammelan in New Delhi (Nov 23, 2025) • In the original speech, Singh discussed cultural ties with the Sindh region. Not Israel, Iran, or Middle Eastern conflicts India’s Press Information Bureau and other fact-checking groups have confirmed the viral video is digitally manipulated. Cases like this highlight why preserving the record of an event matters. When the original footage, timestamps, and source references are easy to verify, it becomes much harder for edited or synthetic clips to mislead people. That’s the problem systems like TruTime aim to address, creating verifiable references for media so viral fragments can always be compared against the original record. youtube.com/shorts/XLjN39n…
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
A clip circulating online appears to use an AI-generated voice overlay added to a segment from the DG ISPR press conference held on 27 February 2026. The segment being shared comes from approximately minute 2:05 to 2:35 of the original press conference. When audio overlays or edits are added to fragments of a longer event, the only reliable reference point is the full recording of the event itself. +The link to the original press conference is included below for comparison. Situations like this highlight a broader challenge online. Fragments can spread quickly, while the full record of the event is often harder to locate and verify. This is part of the problem projects like TruTime are trying to addres. creating verifiable references for media so that viral clips can always be traced back to the full record they came from. When the reference to the original event is easy to find, misinformation becomes much harder to sustain.
Fact Check Master@fcheckmaster

Propaganda Alert: An Afghan propaganda account is circulating an AI manipulated clip from the DG ISPR press conference held on 27 February 2026 to spread false claims. The video being shared is a short segment taken from minute 2:05 to 2:35 of the original press conference with an overlaid voice added later to distort the context. The link to the original press conference is available in the comments below.

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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
@Khizar__Aman @fcheckmaster Right. Viral media often spreads as fragments. A short segment can be edited, reframed, or altered with overlays, but the full record of the event still exists. The key is making sure people can easily compare the fragment to the original press conference.
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Khizar Aman
Khizar Aman@Khizar__Aman·
@fcheckmaster This is why verifying the original source matters. A 30-second edited clip with an added voice cannot change the facts. The complete 27 February 2026 press conference clearly exposes this attempt at misinformation.
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Fact Check Master
Fact Check Master@fcheckmaster·
Propaganda Alert: An Afghan propaganda account is circulating an AI manipulated clip from the DG ISPR press conference held on 27 February 2026 to spread false claims. The video being shared is a short segment taken from minute 2:05 to 2:35 of the original press conference with an overlaid voice added later to distort the context. The link to the original press conference is available in the comments below.
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
Over 2,000 years ago Aristotle wrote: “To say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true.” Truth begins with reality. But to examine reality, we need a reliable record of what actually happened. The internet changed that. Today anyone can clip a video, remove context, and push a fragment to millions. The viral version spreads faster than the full record. Soon the fragment becomes the narrative — even when it isn’t the whole story. The problem isn’t just misinformation. It’s that the record disappears behind the narrative. TruTime is an attempt to fix that. Not by deciding what’s true. But by preserving the record of media as it existed in time — so the full context can always be examined. Truth will always be debated. Interpretations will always differ. But the record should remain. The internet doesn’t need another referee. It needs a better record.
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
TruTime progress update! The infrastructure is now working. We can generate a verifiable record for media and produce a public reference anyone can independently check. When a video goes viral, there should be a way to trace it back to the original source and timestamp. The rails for that system are now built. Now we’re turning it into a platform.
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
A quote is going viral claiming Trump said: “I was just making stuff up… maybe I sold a Tomahawk to some other country.” The full press conference is available here: youtube.com/live/adc28v_SN… That exact sentence does not appear in the video. The viral clips appear to come from two moments in the press conference: 📍 21:40 – First exchange about the Iranian school strike 📍 31:40 – Follow-up questioning from reporters During those exchanges Trump says: • “Because I just don’t know enough about it.” • “I think it’s under investigation.” • “Numerous other nations have Tomahawks.” What seems to have happened is a quote mutation: 1️⃣ Real statement 2️⃣ Commentary summarizing it 3️⃣ Paraphrase spreads 4️⃣ Paraphrase gets put in quotation marks 5️⃣ It goes viral as if it was said verbatim This is why examining the full record of an event matters. Viral clips move fast. Full interviews usually tell the fuller story. If you’ve seen other examples of deceptively clipped videos or mutated quotes, drop them below. x.com/partisangirl/s…
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
Many deceptively edited videos online aren’t fake footage. They’re real clips presented in misleading ways: • context cut from the beginning or end • captions quoting only part of what was said • edits that change the sequence of events • headlines framing what viewers think they’re seeing Reply with examples you’ve seen. Let’s examine the clips and compare them to the full record. #MediaLiteracy #ContextMatters
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
x.com/HouseMajPAC/st… An 18-second clip of Brandon Herrera (@TheAKGuy) is circulating online that some people say is being taken out of context. Longer clips and the full podcast episode provide the surrounding discussion and fuller context. Situations like this illustrate a broader pattern in modern media. A short clip spreads first. People react to the fragment. A narrative begins forming around what that fragment appears to show. Later, the fuller record of the conversation emerges — the longer footage, surrounding discussion, or additional context. By that point, the narrative has often already taken shape. Community Notes helps add context in some cases, which is a step in the right direction. But the deeper challenge is structural. Understanding should begin with the record of events themselves — the full conversation, the original footage, the underlying evidence. Narratives and interpretations will always exist. But ideally they should follow the record, not outrun it.
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
Situations like this show a pattern in modern media. A short clip spreads first. A narrative forms around it. The fuller record of the conversation appears later. Community Notes helps add context when it can, which is a step in the right direction. But the deeper issue is philosophical: narratives should follow the record of events, not outrun it.
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
Journalism traditionally built narratives from record sources, documents, full events. Online media often flips that order. Narratives spread first, and the record of what actually happened appears later. Maybe what we’re missing online is a place where the record exists before the narrative.
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Richard
Richard@ricwe123·
So here we have a jewish man,in Nice, staging a fake antisemitic attack in front of pro-Palestinian protesters as soon as the police arrives.....
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
Journalism traditionally built narratives from records, sources, documents, and full events. Online media often reverses that process. Narratives spread first. The record of what actually happened appears later. When the record layer is weak, narratives/whoever pushes them become easier to shape.
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
@realtalkstruth Yeah, there are essentially only two possibilities, right? 1) That's the news, and the truth is basically the same so they all write the same thing. 2) It's sort of news, but it doesn't quite fit an agenda, so they twist the words to make it fit. Sadly, it is #2.
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American Citizen 🇺🇸
American Citizen 🇺🇸@realtalkstruth·
Why do all major news networks suddenly repeat the exact same phrases… word for word?🧐
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team@truti.me
[email protected]@TruTimeTeam·
The deeper issue might be how information spreads online. News traditionally begins with records and sources, then narratives form around them. Online it often works in reverse: narratives spread first, and the record of what actually happened appears later — if at all. That’s where confusion starts.
Awesome Jew@Awesome_Jew_

X is no longer a reliable source for real-time news. The Iran war has made that painfully clear. Fabricated stories are spreading with no community notes, and many accounts are openly posting fake news. Until the platform cracks down on AI-generated hoaxes and outright fabrications, it has become virtually useless. X has lost its credibility as a news source. @elonmusk

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