Fake News Scam Sites Advertising On Real News Sites
Virtual_Raider writes "Wired is running a story about a new twist in the never-ending quest to prove P. T. Barnum's adage. Old: Scammers are creating fake news sites that look almost like the real thing. New: They are advertising on real news sites, making it difficult for unwary readers to catch on they are being duped with fake coverage of get-rich-quick scams. Among those running the scam 'news' ads are the Huffington Post and Salon. From the article: 'The story has art, it has a sidebar, there's weather, supposed reader comments — even ads. Steadman is described as "a mother from San Francisco" — at least, when I read the article. Thanks to cutting-edge reporting techniques perfected by News 5, she will automatically move to the geolocation of your internet IP address when you read it. Look, she lives right in your neighborhood!'" Forbes also wrote about the scam news sites a couple of weeks back.
... just to get you to click thru
Generally, bash is superior to python in those environments where python is not installed.
Barbara talks about the "Miracle Pill" known as Resveratrol
Notice they didn't user her last name. But they use her image and the abc News logo ... their domain name is hilarious, news3news.com (looks like newsnews and 3news were taken, ha) which leads one to the registrant residing at:
PO Box 12068
George Town, Grand Cayman KY1-1010
P.O. Box in the Cayman Islands. Imagine that. They don't even bother to use domainsbyproxy or a similar service like most of the other domains listed in this Wired story.
... but using abc's logo and Walters' image for advertising is definitely prosecution worthy. I hope some of these companies go after this scum.
Selling questionable meds is probably pretty hard to prosecute
My work here is dung.
The summary could at least tell us what news sites it is showing up on. Huffington Post and Salon are almost as reliable as The Onion.
The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
We are all traveling on the disinformation superhighway.
I got redirected to an obviously fake news site.
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
Newspapers run similar ads (with a tiny "Paid Advertisment" banner on the top) and I've heard of TV stations doing the same thing with "Fake Newscasts" but that's usually more common during election years.
ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
You thought something posted by kdawson was a real article? You must be new here.
For those wondering how these advertisers make money here is the basic rundown.
1. They pitch you the product with a news site as mentioned above or a flog (fake blog) posing as a midwestern housewife giving a legitmate review of the product. Unauthorized endorsements by Ophrah and Barbra Walters are also popular.
2. Rebills, you pay the $2.00 you think it costs to buy the product. Turns out that's only for the 15 day free trial and so they can get your credit card. If you don't call them and cancel within that time they will charge another $100/month or so to get the product shipped to your house ever month. They bury this fact in a page long terms and conditions no one ever reads.
3. Acai, Resveratrol, Colon Cleanse, bizops (get rich quick), Google Money Tree and the like are popular products.
4. Most of the people doing this aren't big companies, but affiliate marketers who get a substantial cut every time they refer a sale.
5. Thankfully the FTC and state attorney generals are trying to crack down on this sort of thing.
For your amusement, here is another one that is running: http://the-daily-tribune.com/breaking/13/?t202id=4693&t202kw=6417707
I see a ton of these ads served by a company called Pulse 360.
Those who can do. Those who can't sue.
Wow, that beats "vegan haggis" for oxymoron of the day.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
Fox has to get traffic somehow.
"Sometimes the thing that you think isn't a scam, is a scam, and the thing that you think is a scam, isn't a scam at all. And sometimes that, itself, is the scam! So as you can see, things can be pretty tricky out there for consumers."
"And for reporters!"
When did the future switch from being a promise to a threat? -C. Palahniuk
Recently both Google and slashdot have been running ads for "you can make 11,668.00 from home" lately. The ads are served up by google to sites like slashdot, and it's the same modus operandi: Ask you for $2 for information, then bill you $70 to $90/month for a "subscription" you supposedly agreed to.
For search pages, google can argue that it's just conveying information for free. For ads it serves, google has no such safe harbour - it's a for-profit business, and they really should crack down on these obvious scams.
Haven't got my first one of them yet, but the news reports have been saying that Twitter, Youtube, and ITunes have been getting swamped with Jacko traffic, and spammers have already started firing out scams, probably "Click here to install the video player so you can see Michael Jackson video" etc.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
The problem is, fraud is generally more about a one-time theft than duping you into buying inferior goods. When the snake-oil salesman came to town selling his potions, he promised they would work if you took them for 7 days, but he made sure to leave after about 5 days. He didn't care about selling you the same potion over and over, he only needed to sell it to you ONCE.
You're right that market forces will eventually hurt the sellers of inferior goods, but that's not the kind of "fraud" that's most common.