In the annals of shady public relations stunts, Facebook?s attempt to surreptitiously plant negative ? and highly misleading ? stories about Google into leading media outlets will surely go down as one of the most ham-handed in recent memory.
Everyone is running for cover: Facebook has owned up to the campaign ? but denies it was a ?smear? ? and the powerful PR firm it hired to plant the stories (and which protected its client?s identity) says it regrets ever taking the job, and is parting ways with the social networking giant.
Facebook, you see, had employed a public relations firm called Burson-Marsteller, one of the most powerful PR firms in the country, to orchestrate a campaign designed to get stories published in the mainstream media portraying an obscure Google Gmail feature called Social Circle as a violation of? ?the personal privacy rights of millions of Americans.?
This was a strategy with at least two goals:
- Weaken Google, which has social media ambitions. The two companies are in a huge battle for control of your online ID, and Google has skewered Facebook for not allowing Facebook users to export their contacts, and not letting the search giant index its content, and;
- Deflect attention from the biggest criticism of Facebook: that it plays fast and loose with the privacy of its members, always veering to the side of less.
As several reports have detailed this week, two former journalists now employed by Burson ? John Mercurio, late of Roll Call, CNN, and National Journal; and CNBC?s erstwhile Silicon Valley correspondent Jim Goldman ? were making the rounds pitching this hooey to various outlets in an attempt to capitalize on Google?s increasing tangles with the feds, and intense public interest in online privacy.
Among those contacted was Christopher Soghoian, a well-known internet privacy researcher and blogger, who promptly posted the e-mail he received from Burson?s Mercurio asking if he was interested in ?authoring an op-ed this week for a top-tier media outlet? about ?Google?s sweeping violations of user privacy.? Mercurio refused to disclose his client to Soghoian.
?The American people must be made aware of the now immediate intrusions into their deeply personal lives Google is cataloging and broadcasting every minute of every day ? without their permission,? Mercurio inveighed.
But Soghoian, who?s been extremely tough on Google over privacy and data retention, wasn?t buying what Burson was selling and turned the tables on Mercurio by posting the e-mail.
?I get pitches on a daily basis, but it?s usually a company talking how great their product, so this one made me immediately suspicious, even more so when they wouldn?t reveal who the were working for,? Soghoian told BetaBeat on Thursday. ?It seemed pretty clear what they wanted was my name and I could get away with as little work as possible, they would place it and ghost write, they would just use my name.?
?I really think this was an attempt by one large company to stab a dagger in the back of a competitor,? Soghoian added.
We now know, thanks the The Daily Beast?s Dan Lyons, (who knows a thing or two about keeping a secret), that Burson?s client was none other than social networking giant Facebook. Set aside, for the moment, Facebook?s hypocrisy over privacy ? remember the fiasco over Beacon, a program that showed what you bought and movies you rented to your friends automatically? (?Facebook is no better than Google on these issues, so to make these attacks they have to hide behind these PR companies,? Soghoian told BetaBeat. ?If they tried it in public, under their own name, people would laugh in their faces.?)
The way Facebook and Burson went about this charade makes Nixon?s ?plumbers? look like SEAL Team Six.
Source: http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/05/facebook-google-smear/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.