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Six Inauthentic Websites Blocked for Hostile Information Campaign Threat

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Summary

The Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) has issued directions to Internet Access Service Providers (IASPs) to disable access to six inauthentic websites identified by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) as posing a threat for hostile information campaigns (HICs) against Singapore. The six websites—singaporeheadline.com, singaporeweek.com, singapore24hour.com, nanyangweekly.com, singaporebuzz.com, and sgtimes.com—masquerade as Singapore news websites using domain names with Singapore-related terms and content sourced from mainstream media outlets. Five of the websites were created on 28 March 2021 and were part of a network flagged by Google's Threat Analysis Group and Mandiant as conducting mis- and dis-information activities.

“The six websites masquerade as Singapore websites by spoofing or using terms associated with Singapore in their domain name, and carrying local news features and text.”

IMDA , verbatim from source
Published by IMDA on imda.gov.sg . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

GovPing monitors Singapore IMDA Press Releases for new telecom & technology regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 12 changes logged to date.

What changed

IMDA has issued binding directions under the Broadcasting Act to disable access to six inauthentic websites operated by foreign actors. Five of the websites (singaporeheadline.com, singaporeweek.com, singapore24hour.com, nanyangweekly.com, singaporebuzz.com) were identified as part of a network previously flagged by Google's Threat Analysis Group and Mandiant, all created on the same date (28 March 2021) and revamped in June 2025 with enhanced features to resemble authentic news websites. The sixth website (sgtimes.com) similarly masqueraded as a Singapore mainstream news outlet.

Affected parties include Internet Access Service Providers in Singapore, who are now legally required to disable access to these six domains. Organizations and individuals in Singapore should remain vigilant when accessing online content and be alert to websites that use Singapore-related terms but may be operated by foreign actors for disinformation purposes. The IMDA action follows a similar use of the Broadcasting Act in October 2024 to disable access to ten other inauthentic websites.

What to do next

  1. Internet Access Service Providers must disable access to the six inauthentic websites for users in Singapore

Archived snapshot

Apr 24, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

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Six Inauthentic Websites Blocked for Potential Threat of Being Used to Mount Hostile Information Campaigns against Singapore

23 APR 2026 | 4 mins read
SINGAPORE – 23 APR 2026

  1. The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has identified six inauthentic websites operated by foreign actors that could be used to mount hostile information campaigns (HICs) against Singapore. The Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) has considered MHA’s findings and is satisfied that it is necessary to issue directions to Internet Access Service Providers (IASPs) to disable access to these six inauthentic websites for users in Singapore.

  2. The six websites masquerade as Singapore websites by spoofing or using terms associated with Singapore in their domain name, and carrying local news features and text. They are associated with other websites and networks which had previously been flagged by various international analysts as being inauthentic and carrying out mis- and dis-information activities.

Network of Inauthentic Websites

  1. Five of the six inauthentic websites i.e. (a) singaporeheadline.com, (b) singaporeweek.com, (c) singapore24hour.com, (d) nanyangweekly.com, and (e) singaporebuzz.com are associated with a network of inauthentic news websites flagged by Google’s Threat Analysis Group 1 and Mandiant. All five websites were:
  • Created on the same date (28 March 2021); and
  • Revamped within the same period in June 2025 where the websites were not accessible for a few days before becoming live again with a different look. 2 Following their revamp in June 2025, it was observed that all the five websites received similar enhancements to their website and interface (e.g. new features such as a news ticker, search bar and trending now highlights etc.), to more closely resemble authentic news websites.

4. The five inauthentic websites masquerade as mainstream Singapore news websites in the following ways:

  • The five inauthentic websites use domain names with the word “singapore” or associated terms (e.g. nanyang) and have published Singapore-related content. “Nanyangweekly.com” and “singaporebuzz.com” feature sub-headers titled “ Singapore News ” and “voice from Singapore” respectively, while “Singaporeheadline.com” and “singaporeweek.com” state that the website is about Singapore news.
  • During the General Election 2025 (GE), four of the websites (i.e., “nanyangweekly.com”, “singapore24hour.com”, “singaporeheadline.com” and “singaporeweek.com”) carried GE-related news over the course of the 10-day campaign period. Notably, most of these websites were largely inactive prior to the issuance of the writ of election, and only became active after the writ was issued.
  • Most of the Singapore-related content on the five inauthentic websites are assessed to have been taken from mainstream media outlets such as Channel NewsAsia (CNA), The Straits Times, and Mothership, as well as from foreign media outlets such as Bloomberg and Business Insider, but attributed to themselves. Such acts can mislead readers into believing that these are legitimate Singapore-related news websites and that the content published is reflective of official positions or local sentiments.

The Singapore Times

  1. The last of the six inauthentic websites, “sgtimes.com”, also masquerades as a Singapore mainstream news website. Through its visual appearance and content, the website seeks to pass off as a Singapore mainstream news website:
  • The website contains the header “The Singapore Times”, with a sub-header that reads “Singapore News and Travel”;
  • The website predominantly carries Singapore news; and
  • On 25 July 2025, the website posted an article titled “Singapore’s major media Straits Times, Lianhe Zaobao, Singapore Times”, which described “sgtimes.com” as one of Singapore’s mainstream media websites with “high monthly visits”.
  • It is a common tactic for malicious foreign actors to build seemingly credible websites to attract a local following, and subsequently use these inauthentic websites to mount HICs. We have observed overseas examples where such foreign actors have created and used inauthentic news websites to propagate false narratives and sway the target population’s sentiments to advance their own interests. The outcomes are serious: HICs can incite social tension, exploit societal fault lines, manipulate elections and electoral outcomes, as well as undermine confidence and trust in public institutions.
  1. It is in the public interest to issue directions under the Broadcasting Act to disable access to these six inauthentic websites for users in Singapore. The Broadcasting Act was similarly used in October 2024 to disable access to ten inauthentic websites set up by foreign actors.

8. Singaporeans should continue to remain vigilant when accessing online content and be alert to such inauthentic websites and the threat they pose.

MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS
INFOCOMM MEDIA DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY
23 APR 2026

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
IMDA
Published
April 23rd, 2026
Instrument
Rule
Branch
Executive
Joint with
MHA
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Internet service providers Technology companies Consumers
Industry sector
5170 Telecommunications
Activity scope
Website blocking Information security Disinformation response
Geographic scope
Singapore SG

Taxonomy

Primary area
Telecommunications
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Cybersecurity Consumer Protection

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