
Journalist, editor, fact checker. She graduated from the Faculty of Journalism of the Russian State University for the Humanities and a master's degree from the National Research University Higher School of Economics. She worked at Novaya Gazeta and the Monitor project. Teaches media literacy at RANEPA and Moscow Higher School of Economics and Social Sciences (Shaninka). Co-author of a Kazakh textbook on media literacy for high school students.


Is it true that hydrogen peroxide can treat and prevent various diseases, including coronavirus?

Is the newsletter true about doctors from Naberezhnye Chelny who discovered that coronavirus is a bacteria irradiated by radiation?

Is it true that the body needs to detox to remove toxins?

Is it true that the fog that covered Moscow is of radioactive origin?

Is it true that deodorants and antiperspirants containing aluminum cause cancer?

Is it true that if you become infected with coronavirus from someone who is mildly ill, you yourself will get over it easily?

Is it true that frogs have been successfully used to determine pregnancy?

Can frequent vaccinations really cause immune paralysis?

Is it true that coronavirus does not pose a danger to children?

Is it true that a chick that has fallen from the nest cannot be touched, because, having smelled the scent of a person, the bird will not take it back?

	




