Philippine
Air Force crew member aboard a C-130 plane scours the seas while flying
over the western Philippines in the South China Sea as they help search
efforts for the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
The link leads you to a website called caught on camera and forces you to share the link in order to reveal the video.
Try closing the link without sharing and another window will pop up saying, “Please click image above and share us on Facebook to close.”
Malaysia's Minister of Defence and Acting Transport Minister, Hishammuddin Hussein (2nd R) answers questions from journalists during a press conference at a hotel near Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) in Sepang.
Video after the cut
In fact, not one but several different hoax sites are spreading such false rumours, enticing users click on the links and share on Facebook and other social networking sites. Another video link points out that the missing flight has been traced to the Bermuda triangle.
An online web portal that alerts netizens of email hoaxes has already listed this one and warns users not to click on any of these links.
Facebook Survey Scam - 'Malaysian MH370 Plane Found In Bermuda Triangle'
According to the website the message is a callous scam designed to trick Facebook users into promoting the bogus material via Facebook shares and participating in bogus online surveys and says the scam message uses a photograph of a Lion Air passenger plane that crashed into the sea when landing on Bali in April 2013.
Malaysian Airlines carrying 239 passengers has been missing since five days as more countries join the search operation that has widened to more than 27,000 square nautical miles.
Meanwhile online forums have been full of conspiracy theories about the missing flight ranging from terrorist attack to military shooting down the flight to extra-terrestrial intervention.
Dear IIB readers, just incase you have not heard about Bermuda triangle, lets take a look down here
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