A sophisticated attempt to deceive. (NCEW vs. Planted Opinions).Once upon a time there was grass-roots politics. Now there's "astroturf." With due acknowledgment acknowledgment, in law, formal declaration or admission by a person who executed an instrument (e.g., a will or a deed) that the instrument is his. The acknowledgment is made before a court, a notary public, or any other authorized person. to the holder of that trademark for a product used in landscaping, among journalists the term is used to refer to a political product--fake grass-roots activity. For instance, the kind that's generated by slick Web sites promising "Click here, and we'll send your message to everybody in Congress" or to a long list of newspapers. It's a plague. If you've ever enlisted yourself in a campaign of this kind, you probably know by now that it is their message that is being sent, not yours. And in the process of sending it, the people operating the site have acquired your name, your e-mail address See Internet address. e-mail address - electronic mail address , and a pretty good idea of what pushes your buttons. The individually tailored fund-raising messages won't be long in coming. No one knows how much of this stuff actually gets published. Editors see so much of it that they get pretty good at weeding it out. But in any case, they have help. Several hundred people belong to an e-mail list maintained by the National Conference of Editorial Writers. Anyone who suspects a letter didn't originate with the person who claims to have written it posts the text of the letter to the list. If another paper has received the same letter, bingo! That's all she wrote. In some cases, literally A good many papers refuse to print further letters from people who've been caught putting their names to "astroturf." They are, after all, plagiarists. A few papers even publicly identify writers who have attempted to pass off others' work as their own. There's little doubt about the intent to deceive TO DECEIVE. To induce another either by words or actions, to take that for true which is not so. Wolff, Inst. Nat. Sec. 356. . The Farm Animal Reform Movement, one of the worst offenders, enrolls people it calls "FARM reps" who give permission for their names to be used. A site dedicated to consumer activism describes FARM'S scheme as follows. The group faxes letters to local papers, each one "signed" by the FARM rep in that area. "Each time we fax letters to the editors," new reps are told, "we simultaneously e-mail a copy to you, so you can anticipate receiving a call from your editor confirming that you wrote/sent the letter." That is, when your local paper asks you whether you wrote the letter, you are instructed to lie about it. It doesn't even work very well, now that so many people are comparing notes. Just as the 13th stroke of a clock invalidates not only itself but the 12 strokes that came before it, the second identical or near-identical letter discredits all other letters that resemble it. And by making hundreds of editors hypersensitive hy·per·sen·si·tive adj. Responding excessively to the stimulus of a foreign agent, such as an allergen; abnormally sensitive. hy to the possibility of deception on FARM's pet issues, it has probably discouraged the publication of a much larger number of genuine letters. A different kind of astroturf surfaced on the list a few weeks ago, when editors shared their suspicions about a couple of noticeably similar Op-Ed submissions both of which touted the same medical product. I won't identify it because the purpose of the submissions was to get free publicity and I am disinclined dis·in·clined adj. Unwilling or reluctant: They were usually disinclined to socialize. disinclined Adjective unwilling or reluctant to oblige. A little further investigation revealed that the pieces did not come directly from "Professor X" or "Doctor Y," as they appeared to. Instead, all the messages were sent from the same computer, which we traced to the bulk e-mail division of Cable & Wireless USA. Not a good sign. Professor X was appalled to discover what was going on. He had, he told me, originally been asked if he'd allow his name to be used on a promotional piece, and he refused. He is, however, genuinely enthusiastic about the product and so he agreed to look over a draft, which he revised and sent back. But he didn't know how it was being distributed, nor that other authors had been similarly recruited. A certain amount of ghost writing is acceptable. Newspaper editors do know that when they receive or solicit commentary from someone busy enough or important enough to have his own media staff, he's probably not scratching it out himself with a quill quill: see pen. pen on parchment parchment, untanned skins of animals, especially of the sheep, calf, and goat, prepared for use as a writing material. The name is a corruption of Pergamum, the ancient city of Asia Minor where preparation of parchment suitable for use on both sides was achieved in . But that's open and aboveboard. What pushes Cable & Wireless USA over the line is the deliberate attempt to conceal its role, and its clients' role, in generating the articles. In fact, concealment is a selling point selling point n. An aspect of a product or service that is stressed in advertising or marketing. Noun 1. selling point - a characteristic of something that is up for sale that makes it attractive to potential customers , according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Cable & Wireless USA website. It boasts that its system evades Evades is a fictional character from the Philippine telefantasya Etheria, the prequel/sequel to the highly-rated Encantadia series. Evades first appeared in Encantadia with a minor role but his character is expanded in Etheria. attempts to block spam E-mail that is not requested. Also known as "unsolicited commercial e-mail" (UCE), "unsolicited bulk e-mail" (UBE), "gray mail" and just plain "junk mail," the term is both a noun (the e-mail message) and a verb (to send it). , and also that each recipient of a company's mass e-mail "sees the messages as being individually delivered to them." In addition, the message shows only the company's name in the "From" address. By now, Professor X assures me, the company that produces this product understands what a public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most disaster Cable & Wireless USA engineered for it. At hundreds of newspapers, any expression of opinion favorable fa·vor·a·ble adj. 1. Advantageous; helpful: favorable winds. 2. Encouraging; propitious: a favorable diagnosis. 3. to the company or its product has been rendered suspect and the only safe way to deal with that suspicion is not to publish. Astroturf doesn't do you any good. It doesn't do your favorite causes any good. Stay off it. Reprinted with permission of the Rocky Mountain News The Rocky Mountain News is a daily morning tabloid-format newspaper published in Denver, Colorado. It is owned by the E. W. Scripps Company. (Despite Scripps still running the paper, it's the only newspaper in the Scripps family not to have the corporate lighthouse logo on , originally published March 27, 2003. Linda Seebach is an editorial writer and columnist for the Rocky Mountain News. E-mail seebach@rockymountainnews.com |
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