How did this ridiculous Instagram privacy hoax from 2012 fool so many stars?

The "Deadline tomorrow!" text is an ancient Facebook meme for the gullible.
By Caitlin Welsh  on 
How did this ridiculous Instagram privacy hoax from 2012 fool so many stars?
Seems legit. Credit: NBC/Tony Barson/FilmMagic/Getty/instagram/mashable composite

Famous folks including Usher, Julia Roberts, Taraji P. Henson, Dave Bautista, Rob Lowe, Josh Brolin, Judd Apatow, Retta, Scooter Braun, Adriana Lima, US Energy Secretary Rick Perry, and high-profile beauty influencers all fell for an ancient social media copypasta -- this time focused on Instagram and a vague threat of posts becoming “public” and able to be used in “court cases”.

Celebrities! They’re just like your credulous aunt who types spaces before all her exclamation points on her balloon-background Facebook posts!

The image that circulated in both Feed posts and Stories was a doctored screenshot of a block of text, with one or two variations on the following:

Don’t forget Deadline tomorrow !!! Everything you’ve ever posted becomes public from tomorrow. Even messages that have been deleted or the photos not allowed. It costs nothing for a simple copy and paste, better safe than sorry. Channel 13 News talked about the change in Instagram’s privacy policy. I do not give Instagram or any entities associated with Facebook permission to use my pictures, information, messages or posts, both past and future. With this statement, I give notice to Instagram it is strictly forbidden to disclose, copy, distribute, or take any other action against me based on this profile and/or its contents. ... NOTE: Instagram is now a public entity. All members must post a note like this. If you prefer, you can copy and paste this version. If you do not publish a statement at least once it will be tacitly allowing the use of your photos, as well as the information contained in the profile status updates.

Hilariously, the text also insists that for it to be legally “valid”, it must be copied and pasted as text, not shared or screenshotted.

A version of this has been doing the rounds for years, with a Facebook-centric version first debunked on Snopes way back in 2012, resurfacing in 2016 (forcing Facebook to debunk it in their Help Centre), 2017, and even earlier this year.

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Women’s Wear Daily reports that Instagram has already debunked the meme, and most of the above deleted the post within minutes or hours. (Some, including Henson's and Bautista’s, were still up at the time of writing.)

It’s wild not just because it is basically as old as MySpace but also because the post is so obviously, obviously fake, and a lazy fake at that. Not only is the word “Instagram” in a totally different font to the rest of the post, it gets ominously larger the further down the post you go, as if it is moving ever closer.

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Objects in post are dumber than they appear. Credit: Screenshot

That’s before you even stop to ponder exactly how a screencapped block of text would legally exempt users of a platform from a key chunk of the Terms of Service.

It was so ubiquitous that Daily Show host Trevor Noah posted a parody on his own Instagram page.

View this post on Instagram

Of course, to the average non-ToS-reading, less digitally literate users (including celebs who were already stars when headshots were still distributed by snail mail) it might feel perfectly plausible in this, the age of the algorithm-based timeline panic -- remember the “Turn on notifications” boom of 2016? -- and hidden like counts.

If Instagram is a huge part of your life, your work, or both, then you might feel you’re constantly having the rug pulled out from underneath you by arguably the most powerful corporation in the world, for reasons that are never satisfactorily explained, while pleas by what seems like the entire user base (COUGH chronological timeline COUGH) are routinely ignored. So it’s understandable that some users might both not quite grasp how fundamentally wrongheaded this pointless meme is, and also grasp at anything that seems to offer some control over their digital presence in the face of yet another reported change that will apparently chip away at the little we do have.

However it happened, one thing is now clear, and that's how many of these celebs -- and Cabinet members -- appear to run their own Instagrams. Bless.

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Caitlin Welsh

Caitlin is Mashable's Australian Editor. She has written for The Guardian, Junkee, and any number of plucky little music and culture publications that were run on the smell of an oily rag and have since been flushed off the Internet like a dead goldfish by their new owners. She also worked at Choice, Australia's consumer advocacy non-profit and magazine, and as such has surprisingly strong opinions about whitegoods. She enjoys big dumb action movies, big clever action movies, cult Canadian comedies set in small towns, Carly Rae Jepsen, The Replacements, smoky mezcal, revenge bedtime procrastination, and being left the hell alone when she's reading.


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