Business & Technology
UK fans struggle to spot AI sports sites, survey finds
SOFIAH NICHOLE SALIVIO
News Editor
DoubleVerify has published research with YouGov showing that fewer than half of UK consumers feel confident identifying AI-generated content online. It also said it had uncovered a network of AI-generated sports websites targeting UK football fans.
The survey of 2,000 UK consumers found that 41% felt confident spotting AI-generated content, while 92% said its rise was making it harder to trust information online. Another 81% said they were concerned about encountering fake or misleading AI content designed to appear genuine.
The findings point to a gap between public concern about synthetic media and people’s ability to recognise it in practice. DoubleVerify linked that gap to a cluster of more than 40 UK-based sports domains that it said were producing AI-written articles and pushing them into large online fan communities.
“As AI-generated content becomes more prevalent, the challenge now shifts to identifying it,” said Stuart Flint, Managing director, EMEA, DoubleVerify. “Consumers are increasingly sceptical, but they don’t feel equipped to distinguish between authentic and synthetic content. That creates a meaningful vulnerability across the open web and social platforms.”
Sports network
The websites identified by DoubleVerify use generic names such as sportupdatenow, soccertrend and sportmoves. Some publish more than 10 sports articles a day without clearly identified editorial staff or original reporting, according to the company.
DoubleVerify said the material ranged from fully AI-generated articles to AI-rewritten stories copied from established UK news publishers. In some cases, the stories included fabricated quotes attributed to real athletes and public figures.
The company described the distribution tactic as “FanFarming”, a process in which links to the articles are seeded into established sports fan groups on major online platforms. The aim, it said, was to draw readers back to websites that then monetise the traffic through advertising.
Based on DoubleVerify’s estimates, including distribution through fan pages, the network has already been exposed to hundreds of thousands of UK sports fans. Several of the domains also appeared to carry malicious advertising, the report said.
How it spreads
The report said sports fan communities are particularly vulnerable because they are built around breaking news, transfer rumours and match reaction. Posts often use urgent language to encourage clicks, then direct users to pages filled with display advertising.
One example involved an article on sportsrock.co.uk that attributed a fabricated quote to Sir Alex Ferguson about a Manchester United transfer target. DoubleVerify said the article was later shared in an online fan group called Fabrizio Romano Transfer News, which it said had 3.8 million members.
DoubleVerify said there was no evidence Ferguson had made the quoted statement. It added that the underlying transfer rumour was real, but the quote was invented.
Another example involved a story circulated in a Chelsea fan group that used a real match result as the basis for an alleged “locker room crisis”. According to DoubleVerify, the article relied on invented quotes, while the actual post-match comments from club captain Reece James had been routine and had not criticised teammates or the manager.
The report also described an Arsenal-related post claiming defender Myles Lewis-Skelly had said it was “time for me to join Chelsea” after being “thrown under the bus”. DoubleVerify said neither the transfer development nor the statement had occurred.
Ad risk
DoubleVerify said advertisements from major brands had appeared on some of the sites when campaigns did not include protections against low-quality AI-generated content. It argued that this exposed advertisers to reputational risk while also diverting spending from established publishers.
Some of the same accounts repeatedly posted links to several domains in the network within the same online communities, suggesting coordinated distribution across multiple sites, DoubleVerify said. It also said the model could generate thousands of pages and millions of potential ad impressions at low cost.
The research comes as concern grows across the media and advertising industries over the spread of AI-generated articles, images and videos that mimic legitimate reporting. The issue is particularly sensitive in sport, where transfer speculation and fast-moving news can make false claims seem plausible.
DoubleVerify said the challenge was not limited to football. In the first weeks of the year alone, its fraud unit identified thousands of similar sites across several languages, showing how quickly automated publishing is scaling across the wider web.
“This is a trust gap at scale,” said Flint. “Consumers know there’s a problem, but they don’t feel equipped to identify it. That creates an opening for bad actors to insert low-quality, AI-generated content into environments people already trust, like sports fan communities.”
Business & Technology
Thames Valley waste firm Grundon wins RoSPA Gold Award
Thames Valley-based Grundon was recognised for its health and safety performance throughout 2025, with the award presented by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA).
Reg Hodson, head of SHEQ at Grundon, said: “We are delighted to receive the RoSPA Gold Award once again.
“This achievement is a testament to the commitment and professionalism of our employees, who put safety at the heart of everything they do.
“Maintaining the highest standards of health, safety and wellbeing is fundamental to our business.
“This recognition reflects the dedication of our teams across the company and our ongoing commitment to creating safe and healthy environments for our employees, customers, contractors and the wider community.”
The RoSPA Awards, now in their 70th year, have grown to become the world’s largest and most prestigious health and safety awards programme.
Originally established as a small event to recognise organisations prioritising worker safety in the UK, the programme has expanded to attract around 2,000 entries from nearly 60 countries in 2026.
Grundon’s award was presented at a ceremony held on June 30.
RoSPA Gold Award winners are recognised for achieving a ‘very high level of performance,’ according to the organisation.
Winners also demonstrate strong risk management practices and ‘well-developed occupational health and safety management systems’.
Business & Technology
Award-winning Oxfordshire farm shop handed one-star hygiene rating
Britwell Salome Farm Shop, on Red Lion Farm in Watlington, was given a one star rating by South Oxfordshire District Council environmental health officers following a routine visit.
One key problem on the day was the management of food safety, which was deemed to require “major improvement”.
One category noted as being “generally satisfactory”, however, was the cleanliness and condition of both the facilities and building.
Meanwhile hygienic food handling was deemed as “improvement necessary”.
The farm shop was previously handed a five out of five rating in July 2024.
Last month Britwell Salome Farm Shop was named ‘local food and drink champions’ for the south east in the Countryside Alliance Awards 2026.
Ms Mearns said her family, including herself, her husband and their three children, set up at Red Lion Farm in 1993 and took over the chilled unit in the barn when it became vacant in 2008, to begin selling the farm’s meat, including pork, beef and lamb, directly to customers, from field to fork.
The shop also stocks a large selection of other locally produced food, from seasonal fruit and veg from a farm in Stanton St John to local honey from the village, jams and preserves which raise money for Oxford homeless charity Porch, as well as bread baked fresh in Thame.
Britwell Salome Farm Shop was approached for a comment.
Business & Technology
Distillery with poor food hygiene score sponsors ‘poshest festival’
The Henley Distillery was slapped with a two-out-of-five food hygiene rating after an inspection by environmental health inspectors in January this year.
Although inspectors deemed the hygienic food handling and management of food safety ‘generally satisfactory’, they deemed the cleanliness and condition of the facilities and building needing necessary improvement.
READ MORE: Pop legend to make shock comeback at UK festival after ‘quitting music’
The Henley Distillery (Image: The Henley Distillery)
This includes having appropriate layout, ventilation, hand washing facilities and pest control to enable good food hygiene.
The company is no stranger to poor food hygiene ratings, given a one-out-of-five food hygiene rating in 2024, and another one in 2025.
Speaking to the Oxford Mail in 2024 the founder and master distiller Jacob Wilson said the low score was unfair and he was shocked by the rating.
He said: ““Unfortunately due to the diverse nature of businesses in South Oxfordshire, they do not have specialists in each field to run their audits which meant our auditor had never even set foot in a distillery before visiting us.”
READ MORE: UK’s ‘poshest festival’ relaxes strict dress code as temperatures rise
Henley Festival (Image: Garry Jones)
The Henley Distillery at Hampstead Farm was opened in 2021 and produces gin and rum in the historic barn in the countryside.
Henley Festival, which is also sponsored by champagne brand Moet and Chandon, is currently taking place, kicking off on Wednesday, July 8 and finishing on Sunday, July 12.
Recognised with awards such as the Thames Valley Chamber of Commerce Group’s SME Business of the Year, the business is a popular tourist attraction with distillery experiences available.
The Henley Distillery has been approached for comment.
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