Neha Patil (Editor)

Hoax Slayer

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Owner
  
Brett Christensen

Website
  
www.hoax-slayer.com

Type of site
  
Debunking resource, reference pages

Revenue
  
$50,000/year (advertising)

Slogan(s)
  
Debunking email hoaxes and exposing Internet scams since 2003!

Alexa rank
  
20,967 (Global, 05/2014)

Hoax-Slayer.com is a website established in 2003 by Brett Christensen, dedicated to critically analyzing the veracity of urban legends. While it is best known for debunking false stories, it also hosts a page listing strange but true urban legends. It originated as a Yahoo! group before the website was established. Stories it has debunked include fake videos claiming to depict Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, myths that the 2013 supermoon appeared bigger than it really did, and a "Simon Ashton" hoax claiming that emails from Simon Ashton should not be opened because doing so will lead to your computer being hacked. In 2014, the site was reworked, changing the style and color scheme for main pages and new reports, while old reports retained the previous style.

Brett Christensen

Brett M. Christensen, a resident of Bundaberg, Australia, worked as a caravan park cleaner before he founded Hoax-Slayer.com in August 2003. He was inspired to do so after being convinced that the "Budweiser Frogs virus" really existed, only to discover later that it did not. He writes most of the site's articles, but two of his three sons, according to him, "help maintain the website and do invaluable work behind the scenes." In addition to debunking hoaxes, Christensen has noted that many of them are "loosely derived" from real events. "For example, in Australia in 1999 a woman claimed to have been assaulted by criminals who used a chemical disguised as perfume to disable her. Warnings about that incident, which may not have been true to begin with, soon spread to the internet and have circulated ever since," he told the Guardian.

References

Hoax Slayer Wikipedia