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  • 2018-10-29 (xsd:date)
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  • Zimbabwean inventor did not create an electric car that never needs charging (en)
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  • A false story about a Zimbabwean inventor defying the laws of physics with an electric car that never needs to be recharged is re-circulating on social media. The initial blog post was published in April 2018 on the conspiracy-fueled website Disclose.tv. It popped up again this month on Facebook and has been shared more than 25,000 times, according to CrowdTangle data. This story was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook .) The man who supposedly invented this vehicle, Sangulani Maxwell Chikumbutso, first appeared in headlines in the corners of the internet in 2015. At the time, his company, Saith Technologies, held an Open Day where he debuted his inventions and products, according to Zimbabwean technology news site Techzim . The South African news channel SABC Digital News also covered the event. All of the images on Saith’s Facebook and Twitter pages are from that event, as are all of the pictures of the inventions the company claims to have created. Neither account has been active since mid-2015. The Saith Technologies website appears to have been taken down . Chikumbutso claimed that his car runs on 5 normal gel batteries. According to an archived version of the Saith website, a secret substance is exposed to radio wavelengths, which give the car’s power generator the capacity to funnel the power generated into functional electrical energy and never require a recharge. Following the Open Day event, Techzim questioned the legitimacy of Saith Technologies products. It did not report on the company again. Techzim noted that Chikumbutso’s car was outside of the law of conservation of energy because it somehow converted 220 volt-producing gel batteries into a much higher output of 500,000 watts. We are not sure how this assertion can be dispelled and we hope at some forum scientist [sic] will put the claims to test, the article read. The disclose.tv article says that the U.S. government recently relocated Chikumbutso to California to work on his inventions and that it might be to control this type of invention. There is no evidence that this happened. Our ruling Three years ago, a man at a one-day event touted inventions, including a car that defies the laws of physics. Since 2015, his story has only found a home on false news blogs and conspiracy sites. We rate this claim Pants on Fire! Correction, Dec. 2, 2019: This report has been corrected to note that SABC Digital News is a news organization based in South Africa, not Zimbabwe. (en)
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