Contributors To Prominent Publications Have Taken Payments in Exchange For Positive Coverage (theoutline.com) 130
Jon Christian, reporting for The Outline: Interviews with more than two dozen marketers, journalists, and others familiar with similar pay-for-play offers revealed a dubious corner of online publishing in which publicists blur traditional lines between advertising and public relations, quietly pay off journalists to promote their clients in articles that make no mention of the financial arrangement. People involved with the payoffs are extremely reluctant to discuss them, but four contributing writers to prominent publications including Mashable, Business Insider, and Entrepreneur told me they have personally accepted payments in exchange for weaving promotional references to brands into their work on those sites. Two of the writers acknowledged they have taken part in the scheme for years, on behalf of many brands. One of them, a contributor to Fast Company and other outlets who asked not to be identified by name, described how he had inserted references to a well-known startup that offers email marketing software into multiple online articles, in Fast Company and elsewhere, on behalf of a marketing agency he declined to name.
Double Standard (Score:5, Insightful)
It drives me nuts that bloggers and small time accounts are required by the FCC to tag and make obvious their posts that include sponsored content, but the major media outlets have blatant advertising all over the place that isn't disclosed. If it's an ad, they need to start putting disclaimers on it. Any compensation be it free product or paid placement/reviews needs to be stated before and after the ad.
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What about having a standard logo for this, which would make it easier to identify such content? And rules about the minimum dimensions of the logo for TV/streaming, printed media and the Web?
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What about having a standard logo for this, which would make it easier to identify such content? And rules about the minimum dimensions of the logo for TV/streaming, printed media and the Web?
Is the poop emoji copyrighted?
Maybe lose the smile though...
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I mean look at X media. How can anyone take X media seriously? Those talking heads on X media are just screaming out to be punched in the face for their hypocrisy. Meanwhile, idiots watch X media and trash on
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How about a lemming holding a bag of cash?
Oh no, wait....
HYPNO-TOAD!... holding a bag of cash.
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The FCC does not regulate media content on the Internet. There is no legal requirement to tag sponsored content or disclose close relationships. The web sites or writers do it because of journalistic ethics and integrity.
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No, but the FTC does in certain cases. Video game reviewers, for example, have very specific and strict rules about what they must disclose. For example, if a review copy of the game was provided by a developer/publisher, they must say so at the beginning of the video. It's a fairly recent development, from what I understand.
Here is an example [youtube.com].
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I don't think your blog is covered by the rules of the FCC. However normally it is to the blogger and the other companies to let people know what are ads vs what are are their views/opinions. The risk is if me as a blogger get paid by say LSung to prays their latest device, and the device sucks quite obviously, then my reputation as a blogger is diminished (if that is possible). Vs if I was a blogger and I was writing about something else, and there was a LSung ad for the same crappy product, being that i
Journalism ... (Score:5, Insightful)
... is cheaper than advertising.
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FTFY (Score:5, Informative)
FTFY. (Having spent years on both sides of the game.)
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xxxJonBoyxxx corrected:
ALMOST ALL PUBLICATIONS will take a well-crafted PR statement, make a few changes and publish it as a story.
FTFY. (Having spent years on both sides of the game.)
Sadly, I am out of points, or else I would mod this post +1 Informative.
As a former computer industry writer (my last gig was as a columnist and feature writer for Boardwatch Magazine, before Penton Media first turned it into a low-rent Network World clone, then folded it), I've seen this kind of thing happen all the time. We didn't do it at Boardwatch, but I sure came under considerable pressure to whore myself out when McGraw-Hill ousted Susan Breidenbach as editor in chief at LAN T
Re: Journalism ... (Score:2)
Journalists pushing ads are far more valuable than traditional advertising. Traditional (Internet) advertising is super cheap.
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Agreed, and I would add that traditional (Internet) advertising doesn't work well at all [slashdot.org].
Procter & Gamble said that its move to cut more than $100 million in digital marketing spend in the June quarter had little impact on its business, proving that those digital ads were largely ineffective.
Embedding ads into news stories makes sense but, just as TV shows are short on content and long on commercials, journalism will be an afterthought.
It happens (Score:5, Interesting)
This is just the tip of the iceberg. Forbes just fired its science writer for having Monsanto ghost-write his pro-GMO articles for him. The scumbag is also a "researcher" at Stanford who has published scientific articles about how safe GMOs are.
http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.c... [cbslocal.com]
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At least unlike the TV show, we were able to find out who the ghost writer is.
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Hope this tool loses his degree.
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Any precedent on this happening?
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But was the ghost-writer wrong, or being deceptive in his content?
I can see someone posting an article that he didn't write under his name, a fireable offense. Being the GMO are often portrayed as the boogie man, Monsanto want to put their best foot forward.
I am not saying Monsanto is the good guy, but you are quite bitter about this, where I haven't yet heard of any major proven problems with GMO. Sure big companies can be hiding them, this is historically a common problem. However there seems to be en
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If Monsanto is willing to go to such shady lengths to have researchers say good things about their products, are you surprised that you haven't heard of any proven problems?
Just remember how far the tobacco industry was willing to go to make people think their poison was safe.
Re: It happens (Score:3)
You know GMOs are safe right? Or are you a gene denier?
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Oh yes. I've read many articles in Forbes telling me so.
http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.c... [cbslocal.com]
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Excellent, then Monsanto does not need to be paying journalists promoting their products, do they?
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The scumbag is also a "researcher" at Stanford who has published scientific articles about how safe GMOs are.
GMO plants are no more or less safe than other plants. The danger of GMOs is not the GMOs themselves but rather why they have been modified. Specifically, Monsanto modifies plants to be immune to extremely caustic pesticides and herbicides which can kill other farmers' crops miles away and have unquantified long-term effects on humans. What we really need is large-scale precision farming so that there is no need for pesticides or herbicides.
That title is a bit long... (Score:5, Insightful)
Are the words "bribe" and "corrupted" still in modern dictionaries?
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Yeah, but they're just redirects to "political donation" and "business".
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Ever sense 2016, these words have no meaning, neither does truth, integrity or sane.
Like "the ten best" (Score:1)
"There are lies, damned lies, and websites!"
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Normally this is click bait more then anything else. And it is the 10 best based on what they know about, and they didn't do a lot of real research to find this no-named brand which is actually superior.
Top 10 Cell phone I will classify iPhone 8, iPhone X, Samsung Galaxy 8, Samsung Galaxy Note 8, Google Pixel 2, Essential Phone, Razor Phone, I would probably need to look up what LG has and perhaps Nokia. To seem like I am being fair I would make the most popular phone (iPhone X or the Galaxy Note 8) in the
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When I see a website featuring "the ten best" of anything, I assume that they divide it into twelve pages, each 80% advertising.
Business Insider? Mashable? (Score:1)
I am shocked and appalled that these quality publications would behave this way. That is Uber irresponsible. Perhaps Facebook and Google can use their groundbreaking AI technologies to detect this kind of thing.
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Journalism
Little, yellow, different.
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You see, it's like Anonymous: there's no "leader" and no controls over who decides to put on a "#GamerGate" shirt, so anyone can claim to be "in
This is why a country needs (Score:2)
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from the other side (Score:1)
From the other side of this, as a startup founder, I get solicited weekly by media platforms interested in being paid to write a story or shoot a video focused on my company. Previously, I didn't see this as nefarious, but I am cheap, and generally waited until someone would write about us for free. I do pay a service to distribute press releases, which seems to be a very normal thing to do.
The big exception in pay-for-publication space for me is scientific publication. I am a scientist, my company does re
Pay for Play - whaaaa? (Score:2)
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Gartner check if Forrester have already published anything on the same subject, and if they have they take the contrary position.
Forrester's approach is completely different. Diametrically, you might say.
No kidding (Score:2)
Here's a hint: people aren't as stupid as you think they are. They can generally tell when you're reporting as truth something they see with their own eyes is false, and vice-versa. That's why journalism gets no respect these days. Everything reads like propaganda and the only people who think it doesn't are the bubble-dwellers in NY, SF, and DC who write it and hand out almost exclusively with othe
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Competently done propaganda doesn't read like propaganda. If you think it does, you're falling for the competent stuff.
People think they see a whole lot more with their own eyes than they actually do. If they're told about it, and it suits their prejudices, they'll often start to believe they've seen it with their own eyes. Journalism gets no respect from people who don't want to hear the truth. It's hardly perfect, but it gets a lot right.
In Other News (Score:1)
The sky confirmed to be blue. More at 11...
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It makes sense. (Score:2)
You know, the other day I was sitting in my La-Z-Boy recliner enjoying the lumbar heater while surfing the net on my high-performance MSI laptop. Just as I was cracking open a fresh Coke and salivating at the crisp 'fizzle' sound, I realized how much of the media I consume is filled with product placement.
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That's the obvious stuff. Listen carefully to celebrity interviews and you'll often hear them drop a brand name where they don't need to. Some of them are more subtle than others, but they're all getting paid every time that name passes their lips.
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FInally, a definition of "Fake news" (Score:1)
Oh come on (Score:1)