In October 2017, a Ruptly-produced
viral video about an American restaurant creating a special burger to celebrate
Vladimir Putin's birthday turned out to be fabricated. Ruptly removed the video from its
YouTube channel and stated that its employees and not the restaurant were involved in the creation of the video, "which, unfortunately, compromised the reliability of the video. We are grateful to our audience for drawing attention to the discrepancy in our story". On 27 November 2018,
Polygraph.info alleged that Ruptly published a misleadingly edited video of an altercation between
Ukrainian and Russian ships during the
Kerch Strait incident in which a Ukrainian tugboat was rammed by a Russian Coast Guard vessel. Polygraph later updated the story to advise that Ruptly had contacted it to say Ruptly "acquired and published without editing" a short version of the ramming video which it had received on 25 November 2018 and that it published the full version, "as soon as" it was able to obtain it. Polygraph confirmed that Ruptly did publish the full version of the video on 26 November but that the full version was published by other Russian media on 25 November. In its update, Polygraph stated that it had "no means to independently confirm that Ruptly.tv did not edit the first, shorter version, of the video". In April 2019, Ruptly provided exclusive video coverage of
Julian Assange being forcibly removed from the
Embassy of Ecuador, London. Ruptly obtained the footage by videoing the embassy using a crew of five working in shifts 24 hours per day for the week leading up to Assange's arrest. Ruptly's twitter video of the arrest achieved 1.7 million views within a day. During 2018 and 2019, Ruptly provided live coverage from France of the
yellow vest protests. In August 2020,
The New York Times reported that a Ruptly video of
Black Lives Matter protesters apparently burning a bible in
Portland, Oregon, edited in a misleading way, "
went viral" after it being shared with an inaccurate caption on social media by far-right personality Ian Miles Cheong and then conservative politicians. The
Times said the clip "appear[ed] to be one of the first viral
Russian disinformation hits of the
2020 presidential campaign”. An
NBC report in the wake of this incident found that Ruptly edited user-generated protest videos to highlight violence over peaceful protest. ==Organization==