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Hmmmm. I wonder.
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Sounds a awful lot like Operation Lifesaver. <br /> <br />The fake persuaders <br /> <br />Corporations are inventing people to rubbi***heir opponents on the <br />internet <br /> <br />http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,5673,715158,00.html <br /> <br />George Monbiot <br />Tuesday May 14, 2002 <br />The Guardian <br /> <br />Persuasion works best when it's invisible. The most effective marketing <br />worms its way into our consciousness, leaving intact the perception that <br />we have reached our opinions and made our choices independently. As old as <br />humankind itself, over the past few years this approach has been refined, <br />with the help of the internet, into a technique called "viral marketing". <br />Last month, the viruses appear to have murdered their host. One of the <br />world's foremost scientific journals was persuaded to do something it had <br />never done before, and retract a paper it had published. <br /> <br />While, in the past, companies have created fake citizens' groups to <br />campaign in favour of trashing forests or polluting rivers, now they <br />create fake citizens. Messages purporting to come from disinterested <br />punters are planted on listservers at critical moments, disseminating <br />misleading information in the hope of recruiting real people to the cause. <br />Detective work by the campaigner Jonathan Matthews and the freelance <br />journalist Andy Rowell shows how a PR firm contracted to the biotech <br />company Monsanto appears to have played a crucial but invisible role in <br />shaping scientific discourse. <br /> <br />Monsanto knows better than any other corporation the costs of visibility. <br />Its clumsy attempts, in 1997, to persuade people that they wanted to eat <br />GM food all but destroyed the market for its crops. Determined never to <br />make that mistake again, it has engaged the services of a firm which knows <br />how to persuade without being seen to persuade. The Bivings Group <br />specialises in internet lobbying. <br /> <br />An article on its website, entitled Viral Marketing: How to Infect the <br />World, warns that "there are some campaigns where it would be undesirable <br />or even disastrous to let the audience know that your organisation is <br />directly involved... it simply is not an intelligent PR move. In cases <br />such as this, it is important to first 'listen' to what is being said <br />online... Once you are plugged into this world, it is possible to make <br />postings to these outlets that present your position as an uninvolved <br />third party... Perhaps the greatest advantage of viral marketing is that <br />your message is placed into a context where it is more likely to be <br />considered seriously." A senior executive from Monsanto is quoted on the <br />Bivings site thanking the PR firm for its "outstanding work". <br /> <br />On November 29 last year, two researchers at the University of California, <br />Berkeley published a paper in Nature magazine, which claimed that native <br />maize in Mexico had been contaminated, across vast distances, by GM <br />pollen. The paper was a disaster for the biotech companies seeking to <br />persuade Mexico, Brazil and the European Union to lift their embargos on <br />GM crops. <br /> <br />Even before publication, the researchers knew their work was hazardous. <br />One of them, Ignacio Chapela, was approached by the director of a Mexican <br />corporation, who first offered him a glittering research post if he <br />withheld his paper, then told him that he knew where to find his children. <br />In the US, Chapela's opponents have chosen a different form of <br />assassination. <br /> <br />On the day the paper was published, messages started to appear on a <br />biotechnology listserver used by more than 3,000 scientists, called <br />AgBioWorld. The first came from a correspondent named "Mary Murphy". <br />Chapela is on the board of directors of the Pesticide Action Network, and <br />therefore, she claimed, "not exactly what you'd call an unbiased writer". <br />Her posting was followed by a message from an "Andura Smetacek", claiming, <br />falsely, that Chapela's paper had not been peer-reviewed, that he was <br />"first and foremost an activist" and that the research had been published <br />in collusion with environmentalists. The next day, another email from <br />"Smetacek" asked "how much money does Chapela take in speaking fees, <br />travel reimbursements and other donations... for his help in misleading <br />fear-based marketing campaigns?" <br /> <br />The messages from Murphy and Smetacek stimulated hundreds of others, some <br />of which repeated or embellished the accusations they had made. Senior <br />biotechnologists called for Chapela to be sacked from Berkeley. AgBioWorld <br />launched a petition pointing to the paper's "fundamental flaws". <br /> <br />There do appear to be methodological problems with the research Chapela <br />and his colleague David Quist had published, but this is hardly <br />unprecedented in a scientific journal. All science is, and should be, <br />subject to challenge and disproof. But in this case the pressure on Nature <br />was so severe that its editor did something unparalleled in its 133-year <br />history: last month he published, alongside two papers challenging Quist <br />and Chapela's, a retraction in which he wrote that their research should <br />never have been published. <br /> <br />So the campaign against the researchers was extraordinarily successful; <br />but who precisely started it? Who are "Mary Murphy" and "Andura Smetacek"? <br /> <br />Both claim to be ordinary citizens, without any corporate links. The <br />Bivings Group says it has "no knowledge of them". "Mary Murphy" uses a <br />hotmail account for posting messages to AgBioWorld. But a message <br />satirising the opponents of biotech, sent by "Mary Murphy" from the same <br />hotmail account to another server two years ago, contains the <br />identification bw6.bivwood.com. Bivwood.com is the property of Bivings <br />Woodell, which is part of the Bivings Group. <br /> <br />When I wrote to her to ask whether she was employed by Bivings and whether <br />Mary Murphy was her real name, she replied that she had "no ties to <br />industry". But she refused to answer my questions on the grounds that "I <br />can see by your articles that you made your mind up long ago about <br />biotech". The interesting thing about this response is that my message to <br />her did not mention biotechnology. I told her only that I was researching <br />an article about internet lobbying. <br /> <br />Smetacek has, on different occasions, given her address as "London" and <br />"New York". But the electoral rolls, telephone directories and credit card <br />records in both London and the entire US reveal no "Andura Smetacek". Her <br />name appears only on AgBioWorld and a few other listservers, on which she <br />has posted scores of messages falsely accusing groups such as Greenpeace <br />of terrorism. My letters to her have elicited no response. But a clue to <br />her possible identity is suggested by her constant promotion of "the <br />Centre For Food and Agricultural Research". The centre appears not to <br />exist, except as a website, which repeatedly accuses greens of plotting <br />violence. Cffar.org is registered to someone called Manuel Theodorov. <br />Manuel Theodorov is the "director of associations" at Bivings Woodell. <br /> <br />Even the website on which the campaign against the paper in Nature was <br />launched has attracted suspicion. Its moderator, the biotech enthusiast <br />Professor CS Prakash, claims to have no connection to the Bivings Group. <br />But when Jonathan Matthews was searching the site's archives he received <br />the following error message: "can't connect to MySQL server on <br />apollo.bivings.com". Apollo.bivings.com is the main server of the Bivings <br />Group. <br /> <br />"Sometimes," Bivings boasts, "we win awards. Sometimes only the client <br />knows the precise role we played." Sometimes, in other words, real people <br />have no idea that they are being managed by fake ones. <br /> <br />
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