In 2013, Eliot Higgins used videos posted online from Syria to track weapons and pinpoint a chemical strike in Damascus from a computer in the English Midlands.
This year, the British blogger and activist is using the same techniques to investigate the missiles in Ukraine believed to have brought down Flight MH17.
As conflict flares in the Middle East and Ukraine, the number of images posted on social media is increasing exponentially, giving observers half a world away unprecedented visibility of events on the ground.
Footage and still photographs have helped activists and experts identify what they say are Iranian aircraft in Iraq, foreign arms - including U.S.-made rockets - in Syria and killings from Gaza to Nigeria.
Last week, 16-year-old Farah Baker attracted worldwide media coverage after covering a bomb attack near her Gaza home live on Twitter.
Intelligence agencies, security firms and human rights groups are all showing growing interest.
After Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 was blown from the skies over eastern Ukraine last month, video and still photographs of a suspected Russian-built SA-11 surface-to-air missile launcher were quickly identified.
Using Google Streetview, Higgins and colleagues located each of the pictures along the main road route between Donetsk - the stronghold of Russian-speaking separatists - and the border town of Luhansk.
At the same time others were plotting the location of parts of debris from the downed Boeing 777 well before international investigators were able to reach the scene.
“The volume of social media information is increasing all the time,” Higgins told Reuters. “In Ukraine, much more is available than anywhere we have seen before. It makes it much easier to identify what is going on.”
The problem with social media is that what is reported is not necessarily accurate.
But, experts say, while it would be quite possible to fake a single video convincingly, falsifying large numbers filmed from different locations and on different devices would be much harder.
Tools such as Google Streetview also means locations can sometimes be independently verified online. In other cases, local activists have been able to visit the location in person to check details.
Moscow and Russian separatists in Ukraine deny involvement in the attack and have pointed the finger at Ukrainian government forces. Washington and its allies say they are certain the missile launcher came from Russia and that
separatists probably fired on the airliner by mistake.
The U.S. government relied heavily on social media in making its case that a Russian-supplied missile battery was responsible for the crash, which killed 298 people.
Washington also pointed primarily to social media evidence in the initial aftermath of a suspected chemical attack near Damascus in August last year which it ultimately blamed on the government of Bashar al-Assad.
“It is clear that (social media) analysis can provide an unprecedentedly granular picture of events on the ground that potentially makes a huge difference,” said Nigel Inkster, former deputy chief of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) and now head of transnational threats at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

From Syria to Ukraine, social media opens up warfare

As conflict flares in the Middle East and Ukraine, the number of images posted on social media is increasing exponentially, giving observers half a world away unprecedented visibility of events on the ground. (File photo: Reuters)
Reuters, Washington
Thursday 07 August 2014
Last Update: Wednesday, 20 May 2020 KSA 09:43 - GMT 06:43
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