Regensburg / Obertraubling: The Asian restaurant 'Palasia' was on everyone's lips on Facebook a few days ago when a visitor uploaded a photo of a spring roll that allegedly had maggots on it.

As 'BR24' and 'Nordbayern' report, a Facebook user made a big mistake when he publicly posted fake news on Facebook.

Apparently he was served maggots on his spring rolls and immediately shared his displeasure on the popular internet platform.

In a relatively short time, a number of people had shared the news, expressed their disgust in solidarity and thus unthinkingly spread fake news like wildfire.

The manager then immediately had the food inspectorate check his restaurant because he was sure that the maggot in question was cooked rice.

The Department of Public Safety and Trade also confirmed that

“No significant violations of food law regulations were found during the food inspection inspection. In particular, there was no evidence of maggot and/or pest infestation.”

Facebook

By loading the post you accept Facebook's privacy policy.
Learn more

Load post

Fake news spreader deleted post immediately

After the managing director of Palasia posted the letter publicly, the person responsible deleted his post.

But what does that mean now?

In the worst case, this user would have destroyed the existence of a restaurant owner.

Everyone should examine allegations, accusations, etc. for themselves. It is easy to spread unreflected information, especially on social platforms like Facebook.

Source: BR24 , Northern Bavaria

Notes:
1) This content reflects the current state of affairs at the time of publication. The reproduction of individual images, screenshots, embeds or video sequences serves to discuss the topic. 2) Individual contributions were created through the use of machine assistance and were carefully checked by the Mimikama editorial team before publication. ( Reason )