On April 17, 2026, LiveDoor News published a correction piece about the Kyoto child body-disposal case. Rumors on Japanese social media claiming the arrested stepfather held Chinese citizenship were false — the stepfather is a Japanese national, and his arrest was announced before the rumor started spreading. A Taiwanese TV station had amplified the claim in its own coverage, citing Japanese SNS posts as the source. That broadcaster has since apologized, calling its reporting “false information that had been circulating on Japanese SNS. We offer our deepest apologies.”
By the time the correction landed, the disinformation had circulated for days. Far-right Japanese accounts had spread it aggressively, and — when Japanese mainstream media declined to cover the bogus nationality claim — cited the silence as evidence of a mass-media coverup. The LiveDoor post drew roughly 4,700 likes and over 380 replies within a day.
The feedback loop here is the canonical SNS-to-media failure mode: Japanese users invent a foreign-national narrative, a foreign broadcaster recycles it as citizen journalism, Japanese users re-import the foreign coverage as authoritative, and “Why won’t Japanese media cover this?” becomes the finishing move. The top reply in the thread, with 236 likes, is a single sentence: “Did they really take netouyo delusions at face value? Those people aren’t normal — don’t engage.”
the hoax believers
racist whataboutism
By a wide margin the highest-engagement cluster in the thread. Replies in this bucket directly mocked the Japanese far-right (“netouyo,” “ネトウヨ”) accounts that spread the Chinese-stepfather rumor and then pivoted to blaming domestic media for the story’s absence. The top reply (236 likes) reads, “Did they really take netouyo delusions at face value? Those people aren’t normal — don’t engage.”
The second (166 likes) is sharper: users who had ‘fully believed the TV’ and played amateur detective accusing the father, then, once the Chinese-nationality angle came up, abruptly declared ‘old media can’t be trusted — Taiwan is reporting it!’ The writer closes with 頭悪すぎて呆れるわ — roughly “too dumb to even react to.” This is the voice that carried the thread: a majority of likes going to people who treated the hoax itself as the real news.
The second-largest cluster by reply count (42 replies) and the second-most-common framing overall. These are calls for media literacy, source-checking, and skepticism toward SNS content being laundered through foreign broadcasters. One 143-like reply captures the tone in a single line: “‘Why won’t Japanese mass media report this?!’ → Because it’s a lie.”
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Several replies predicted the cycle will repeat. One (20 likes) wrote that even users who got fooled this time will “knee-jerk reply ‘the criminal is foreign!’ the next time a gruesome case hits the news” — the problem isn’t information; it’s the reflex.
A smaller cluster (14 replies / 225 likes) focused on the Taiwanese broadcaster’s failure. The tone was less angry than wry — 152 likes went to a reply noting that Taiwan TV did the right thing by apologizing, but that anyone thinking calmly could have realized Taiwanese media couldn’t possibly have independent intel on a pre-arrest Japanese case. Others pointedly observed the hypocrisy of accounts that “don’t trust Japanese TV but easily trust Taiwanese TV” when it confirms their priors.
A related sub-note, drawing modest likes: Taiwanese media has now demonstrated, in front of Japan, that it will treat “anti-China” SNS content as sourceable reporting.
A small but high-quality cluster (6 replies / 135 likes) pushed past the immediate hoax to ask why it spread so fast. One 76-like reply argued that the speculation propagated not only because of the Taiwanese report but because Japanese police and media have a documented habit of concealing perpetrators’ nationality — publishing only the Japanese-style alias (tsūmei) in ways that read as though a Japanese national was responsible. Public distrust of mass media, the commenter argued, is now being redirected at the police as well.
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Another widely-liked reply framed it more bluntly: if the Japanese media would simply state “the suspect is a Japanese national” when that’s the case, the rumor couldn’t take hold. This is the theme most worth reading carefully — it’s the one attempt in the thread to diagnose the disinformation ecosystem rather than just score points within it.
A tiny cluster — 5 replies, 95 likes — tried to salvage the original xenophobic frame after the hoax collapsed. The most-liked example (46 likes) simply listed three other Japanese police arrests of Chinese nationals from the preceding three days, under “they’re suspected of crimes practically every day.” Another (18 likes) offered the brittle formulation 日頃の行いが悪いから疑われても仕方ない — “because of their everyday behavior, they bring suspicion on themselves.”
The important finding here is the size: this is the framing one would expect to win a Japanese X thread about a Chinese-national-crime rumor. It didn’t. Racist pivots drew under 6% of engagement, well below even the scattered one-liners in the “Other” bucket.
A small cluster (5 replies / 58 likes) of replies explicitly rejecting nationality as a lens. “Whether the perpetrator is Chinese, American, or Japanese, killing a child and dumping the body is a monstrous act — whoever did it should be punished,” one 49-like reply wrote. Another called out the habit of defaulting to “a Chinese person did it” as discrimination, reminding readers that bad actors exist in every population.
Small in volume but notable in context: this framing existed at all in a thread about a disinformation hoax originally designed to generate xenophobic outrage.
The largest bucket by raw count (97 replies, 283 likes) — short one-liners, link-only quote-tweets, emoji reactions, tangential jokes, and comments too ambiguous to categorize. Typical engagement was under 5 likes per reply. A few crossed 30 likes, usually by pairing the correction with personal commentary (e.g., one user expressing surprise that “a pure-blooded Japanese” could commit a crime this brutal, revealing how even within the correction the foreigner-crime reflex lingers).