Melbourne’s two-week coronavirus lockdown will end shortly, although residents still won’t be able to venture far from their homes or into regional Victoria. Acting Premier James...
Multiple memes casting doubt on the need for COVID-19 vaccinations paint a misleading picture about their effectiveness.
A young US woman is aiming to be the first person on Mars - but that's about where the facts stop in many widely shared posts.
A widely shared post features a bogus statement attributed to the renowned - but controversial - virologist Luc Montagnier.
The coronavirus isn't the first such disease linked to cases of symptom-free transmission.
A social media post either misunderstands or misrepresents a report examining the likely effects of relaxing COVID-19 restrictions in England.
It pairs a meme including misinformation about Israel's Pfizer rollout to predictions from a dubious source.
A meme provides a dubious series of statements it suggest will "help you make a decision".
A social media post takes real data out of context to suggest pregnant women shouldn't vaccinate for fear of miscarriage.
The false claim has been circulated alongside several other myths about the virus and immunisations.