See, Bibi can too use a computer! (Or can he?)
astroturfing. A slang term used to mean "artificial" blog buzz. In the blogosphere people may blog about a new product, which in turn prompts others to blog the product's message. When the original blog(s) have been started by a PR company, it is called astroturfing. -- Webopedia
by Ken
What if it's not a PR company doing the astroturfing, but the government of a country, and the "product" is the government's policies?
First, about the above picture. Just try and tell me it doesn't cry out for a thought bubble showing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thinking, "Would somebody please tell me how the #*^% to work this #*^%ing thing?" I find it hard not to think of the legendary 1995 Dilbert strip (click on it to enlarge):
DILBERT (April 9, 1995)
No, Prime Minister, remember you have to hold it upside down and shake it to reboot.
So I'm not exactly confident about the PM's computer skills. Presumably, however, he knows people who know how to do, er, stuff with computers. And now he has become just about the last person on earth to come up with the idea of doing dirty tricks with one. He has reached out to a proposed network of students to (as a recent Haaretz editorial puts it) "operate on social networks as undercover spokesmen for the government and its actions."
As is often the case, Haaretz is not highly sympathetic to the PM's goals or methods.
Dirty tricks won't fix Israel's 'image problem'
The Prime Minister's Office plan to set up a unit of students to operate on social networks as undercover spokesmen for the government and its actions reflects not only the depth of international suspicion of Israel's government, but also the fact that Netanyahu and staff favor public diplomacy tricks above all else.
Haaretz Editorial | Aug. 14, 2013 | 5:44 AM | 5
The Prime Minister's Office wants to set up a unit of students to operate on social networks as undercover spokesmen for the government and its actions. And it's right to want to do so: At a time when clouds of disbelief frequently hover over Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, it has no choice but to recruit new spokesmen, people whose credibility is presently intact. This is a cynical plan that reflects not only the depth of international suspicion of Israel's government, but also the fact that Netanyahu and his staff favor public diplomacy tricks above all else.
According to the report published by Barak Ravid in on Tuesday Haaretz, the government wants to invest almost NIS 3 million in deploying hundreds of students to promote its positions on social media networks -- but with no governmental identification. The public diplomacy units to be established at the universities will operate under the direction of the public diplomacy staff in the Prime Minister's Office, but "The entire idea of the setup is based on activity of students and by students," and therefore, "the idea requires that the state's role not be highlighted."
The above quotes are taken from the official request to the government tenders committee to approve the contract with the National Student Union, which will be a party to this semi-secret project. The honesty of those behind the program is impressive. Perhaps we should praise the government for having finally understood that its official words and deeds can no longer convince the public, either in Israel or abroad. To accomplish that, it turns out, it's better to pretend and to pay others.
This crude attempt by the Likud-led government to burnish its image by recruiting students should also be quashed in the interest of the students themselves. The bribes in the form of stipends that the Prime Minister's Office will pay to the hundreds of warriors in the universities' "public diplomacy units" will raise questions about the honesty of their activity. It's also safe to assume that Arab students won't make it through the project's screening process.
The student union's cooperation with this enterprise turns it into an arm of the government's propaganda apparatus. Aren't these the very students who, for instance, ought to be rising up against the harm Netanyahu's diplomatic policy will cause to research? Aren't these the very students who protested against his economic policy? Instead of protecting academia against political interference, the student leaders are helping subordinate it to directives from the Prime Minister's Office.
A solution to Israel's "image problem" won't be achieved by dirty tricks. To accomplish that, what's needed is a change in policy.
In this, the Israeli government is hardly alone in its misperception. Put highly self-regarding pols together with highly cynical and self-serving advisers, and it's hardly ever possible to persuade the swells that their popularity is sagging not because of their "image" but because of their policies. And one suspects that Israel's isn't the only government on the planet to have suffered the brainstorm of thinking that astroturfing will promote the cause. Merely, perhaps, the clumsiest.
The only thing scarier is the thought that just possibly they could be right.
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SUNDAY CLASSICS SCHEDULE NOTE FROM KEN
Today's back-to-The Gondoliers post will appear at 9pm ET/6pm PT, for infinitely complex scheduling reasons, generally having to do with the expectation that I won't be able to finish it before then.
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Astroturfing has become ubiquitous now. It's revolting to see, but whenever a political news article is published, there in the comments are several posts spouting the republican line.
ReplyDeleteBecause I've seen so much of it, it's pretty easy for me to tell which ones have been put in by paid posters. (I always wondered, how much do they get paid?. Fifty cents per post? Ten cents? A dollar?) But I can see why the average person wouldn't recognize it as such, and think that someone is posting an actual considered opinion.
There's a special place in Hell for people who do that.