fake Nikes, fake blogs
Many of us know that there are tons of fakes in that wide world of consumer products. I mean counterfeight merchandise, such as fake Gucci bags and Nike shoes.
While it is upsetting to be burned by those, the most that can happen is that the fake bag or shoes will fall apart within a couple of weeks from the date of purchase, or embarasse you in front of your eagle-eyed friends. Big deal.
Fake news and news reporters, however, present a much more serious matter. Consider, for instance, the Gannongate saga , of which I am sure you have heard plenty:
"James Dale Guckert (c. 1958) worked under the pseudonym Jeff Gannon as a White House reporter between 2003 and 2005, representing Talon News. After Guckert came under public scrutiny [...], he resigned from Talon News on February 8, 2005.
Guckert has stated that he obtained frequent daily passes to White House briefings. He attended four Bush press conferences, and appeared regularly at White House press briefings. Weblogs discovered Gannon's pseudonym and made public his past history, as Guckert, 'Gannon', and 'Bulldog'. Questions have arisen as to Guckert's relationship with the White House and with the Republican Party. Although he did not qualify for a Congressional press pass, Guckert was given daily passes to White House press briefings "after supplying his real name, date of birth and Social Security number."
Notice that weblogs blew the whistle on him. This shows the increased role of blogosphere in current events, and its influence on the information flow.
And just as with everything that becomes popular, you have to start watching out for fakes.
take a look at this :
"MSN Search Finds Viral Campaign
by Shankar Gupta, Thursday, Feb 24, 2005 6:47 AM EST
NOT CONTENT WITH its massive television, Internet, and radio advertising blitz to promote its newly released proprietary search engine MSN Search, MSN apparently has released a viral campaign, “MSN Found,” to promote the search site.
An MSN spokesperson declined to comment on the viral campaign, other than to say: “There is a lot of great content to be found out on the Web. ‘Found’ complements MSN Search by finding more of the unique content on the Web.”
When the MSN Search marketing blitz was being announced, an MSN executive told OnlineMediaDaily that an agency called 42 Entertainment would be creating virals to promote the search engine.
42 Entertainment declined to comment on the campaign, and referred any questions to MSN’s public relations firm. An MSN spokesperson confirmed that 42 Entertainment worked on the viral campaign, saying: “MSN works with a number of third-party companies, and 42 Entertainment has worked on this and a number of other Microsoft projects.”
The ad features six fictional characters, each with their own Web log. They are Reggie, a DJ from London; Tad, a surfer from Venice Beach; Karen, a dog breeder from Sandusky, Ohio; Swing, a hotel concierge from Tokyo; Cy a security guard and conspiracy theorist from Chicago; and Denise, the owner of the new True dating service.
The viral’s main site, www.msnfound.com, collects all the blogs together, along with pictures of the authors. Each of the authors has a unique shtick.
For example, DJ Reggie suggests music for his readers, all conveniently available on MSN’s music page. Several of the blogs also mention the dating site www.True.com; MSN declined to comment on any relationship with the dating service by publication time.
Each blog also has a section called “finds,” which collects four MSN search results pages on things relevant to the blog’s subject matter. Reggie’s music is “vertiginous.” Don’t know what that means? Why, just click on a link to MSN Search (provided on the blog), and it’ll take you to a dictionary entry provided by MSN Answers, one of the selling points of the search engine.
One common thread in all the blogs is the use of other popular Internet phenomena. Surfer Tad’s blog links the infamous exploding whale video, which wasn’t an ad for anything, but became a popular Internet viral.
Searchers using particular terms (“blubber blowout,” in the case of Tad’s exploding whale) for these videos, which have already gained popularity on the Web, are given both a regular organic search page and also a direct link to the various virals, hosted by MSN and with links back to the fictional characters’ blogs.
The blogs’ fictional characters also interact with each other. During the first wave of entries, “Swing” writes about receiving flowers from a secret admirer--while security guard Cy writes that his “impromptu study of human emotional response to unexpected gifts produced highly intriguing results.”"
The last sentense sounds somewhat cheesy to me and obviously made up. But fakes, in time, do get better at imitating the real thing; some of those fake Nikes are so good that only an expert can tell them from the genuine ones.
And this isn't the only case of a big company using the blog phenomenon to promote itself (McDonalds is another example).
So be careful what you read - I know I will be, now that I have read this disturbing article.
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