Hurricane Melissa AI videos widely circulating onlinepublished at 11:04 GMT

11:04 GMT

Paul Brown and Shayan Sardarizadeh
BBC Verify senior journalists

Many dramatic videos created with artificial intelligence are being shared online as Hurricane Melissa gets closer to Jamaica.

We have observed dozens of such videos on TikTok, which have racked up millions of views in total. A search for Hurricane Melissa on the platform leads users to many AI-generated or old clips from past storms.Some of the videos have watermarks that clarify they were created with AI-generators such as Open AI’s text-to-video model Sora.

Others have removed or blurred watermarks in an apparent attempt to mislead viewers, or feature fake reporters and a mix of short clips that appear like legitimate reports from local sources.

One video, viewed half a million times on TikTok, shows a woman on a balcony filming two sharks swimming in heavily flooded streets.

There’s a blurred sign visible on the bottom left of the clip, likely a watermark that’s been hidden. The uploader later added a label to the caption to indicate the video was made with AI.

Screenshot of a AI-Generated video of a shark swimming in floodwaterImage source, TikTok

One dramatic clip, viewed 2.6 million times, shows what appears to be the eye of the storm filmed from a passenger plane flying nearby.

“That moment when you realise the swirling clouds below aren’t just clouds… they’re a hurricane,” reads the caption.

But the video is not real, and was posted by a user who has a history of sharing fake clips of natural disasters. The clip appears similar to real footage filmed by a US Air Force Reserve crew known as the “Hurricane Hunters” on Monday.

Another clip shows a group of men running for safety as a huge wave makes landfall near a coast. A small VEO watermark is visible on the bottom right, which makes it clear the video was made using Google’s text-to-video generator.

According to an AFP report on Monday, external, TikTok recently removed more than two dozen AI videos of the hurricane. However, fake clips continue to circulate widely on the platform.

BBC Verify has asked TikTok for comment.