Freebie Mania.
ERICSSON SAYS IT'S ALWAYS LOOKING FOR INNOVATIVE marketing
ideas, but e-mail chain letters are not one of them. The Swedish
telecommunications giant is the subject of an Internet hoax offering
free mobile phones to anyone who forwards a particular e-mail message to
eight friends. The bogus offer (detailed on the Web site
urbanlegends.about.com) stems from an earlier e-prank that claimed
competitor Nokia was doling out free mobile phones. The Ericsson offer
was purportedly in response. "My guess is that we've received
slightly more than a thousand questions [about the phone offer],"
says Ericsson spokeswoman Helena Norrman. Nokia ignored the spam but
Ericsson confronted it head-on, even posting an alert on its Web site.
The free phone is one in a growing number of false giveaways that have
promised e-mail letter senders everything from a Honda vehicle to cash
from America Online. Ericsson's Web site tips consumers on how they
can recognize phony promos: despite what the schemes promise, there is
no way yet to trace e-mail letters sent from user to user and, thus, no
way to keep track of who should be rewarded. "So far we have not
received so many inquiries from Latin America," Norrman notes.
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Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
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