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Fact-Check | AI-generated scenes ‘from France’s 2025 Louvre heist’ circulate in Hong Kong

Fabricated videos of museum break-in shared by internet users in the city

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A screenshot of different points in the Facebook reel showing the two fabricated videos of the heist. Photo: Facebook/SCMP Composite

With the rise of social media and generative AI, how much of what we see online is true? In this new series, SCMP Fact-Check, the Post investigates claims circulating online and debunks viral misinformation impacting the daily lives of Hongkongers.

A daring daytime heist of jewels from the Louvre museum in Paris on October 19 made international headlines.

During the heist, the thieves parked a truck with an extendable ladder under the museum’s Apollo Gallery, and used cutting equipment to get through a window and display cases to steal the jewellery.

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A Facebook reel featuring footage purportedly of the theft was posted online by a Hong Kong-based user with more than 240,000 followers.

“At around 9.30am, four masked men ... broke into the building from the balcony and took away the jewellery on display,” a voice said in Mandarin at the 41-second mark of the video, as two separate clips of masked people breaking glass cases are shown.

A screenshot of different points in the Facebook reel showing the two fabricated videos of the heist. Photo: Facebook/SCMP Composite
A screenshot of different points in the Facebook reel showing the two fabricated videos of the heist. Photo: Facebook/SCMP Composite

However, a digital forensics expert and the Post’s own checks show they are not genuine, and likely generated by AI.

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