Episode Details
Back to EpisodesTwo College Kids Fooled Wikipedia for 10 Years With This Fake Medieval Knight
Published 1 day, 9 hours ago
Description
What if I told you that two college kids convinced the entire internet that a completely made-up medieval knight was real history? For over 10 years, "Ser Amador" fooled Wikipedia, academic blogs, and thousands of researchers. In this episode, Daniel Torres breaks down the most successful Wikipedia hoax in history and what it reveals about how we decide what's "true" online.
🎯 What You'll Learn:
• How the fake knight entry survived for a decade despite Wikipedia's 120,000 active editors
• The 15+ websites that cited this fictional character as historical fact
• Why Wikipedia's verification system failed so spectacularly in this case
• The psychology behind why false information spreads faster than truth
👤 Perfect for: anyone who's ever wondered how reliable the information we take for granted actually is.
📍 Chapters:
[00:00] Daniel Torres introduces the decade-long Wikipedia deception
[02:15] Meet the college students who created medieval history
[04:45] How "Ser Amador" fooled academic researchers
[07:30] The moment the hoax finally unraveled
[09:45] What this means for everything you read online
[11:30] Why fake news spreads so effectively
This isn't just about a prank gone viral. It's about the fragile system we use to separate fact from fiction in the digital age. When two university students can create "history" that gets cited in research papers, what does that say about the rest of what we believe?
The students expected their joke to last maybe a week. Instead, they accidentally proved how easy it is to manufacture truth when nobody's really checking. Pretty wild when you think about how much we rely on crowd-sourced information.
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🔍 Topics: Wikipedia hoax, fake news, information verification, internet deception, digital literacy
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