Faktograf.hr

[8] In December 2019, Faktograf uncovered the fact that the Croatian Ministry of Economy, Entrepreneurship and Crafts had used money from EU subsidies to approve a grant of €13,200 [the equivalent of $14,500] for the portal Dnevno.hr, which had been proven to having repeatedly shared misinformation about the EU, spread fake news and even hate speech.

[9] In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Faktograf was falsely accused by social media users, online platforms and websites in Croatia, of "effectively censoring their opinions" shared on Facebook, when they were purely marking inaccurate content and misinformation and the decision whether to remove such content remained entirely with Facebook.

[7] In June 2020, Faktograf, together with several other southeast European organizations, founded SEE Check, a fact-checking network to expose viral COVID-19 misinformation in Southeast Europe, as well as a related Viber community group, Twitter account and Facebook page.

[10] In February 2021, Faktograf flagged a video as a hoax, in which an energy drink tested positive for Covid-19.

Faktograf had previously exposed a similar attempt by an Austrian politician using a different carbonated drink.