And observe the stalker in action, using one of the aforementioned stalker/sock puppet IDs, and having used the photo of a COMPLETLY innocent person, who is not associated with this board in any way shape or form. Note the timing of the attack on this board, and the issue which was being exposed.
There is a lot more to this, and it will all be exposed, elsewhere. Perhaps a million miles from the internet.
[End edit] -----------------
If any fellow CAPPsters have any personal info out there, which can be found through your CAPP username, ebay username, or in any other way, please do whatever you need to to safeguard your info.
Otherwise, the odds are that some stalking-lackwit, a pathetic-psychotic harpy-stalker may post it all over the internet.
This is not a joke. Even though THOUSANDS are laughing.
Xppman, not sure if this is directly related, but it seems as though another CAPP member who was quite vocal on the Kommie bds may now be the victim of some stalking and harrassment.
If you have any advice , maybe you should leave a comment here for that person to see.
By Annys ShinWashington Post Staff Writer Tuesday, December 12, 2006; Page D01
The Federal Trade Commission yesterday said that companies engaging in word-of-mouth marketing, in which people are compensated to promote products to their peers, must disclose those relationships.
In a staff opinion issued yesterday, the consumer protection agency weighed in for the first time on the practice. Though no accurate figures exist on how much money advertisers spend on such marketing, it is quickly becoming a preferred method for reaching consumers who are skeptical of other forms of advertising.
Word-of-mouth marketing can take any form of peer-to-peer communication, such as a post on a Web blog, a MySpace.com page for a movie character, or the comments of a stranger on a bus.
As the practice has taken hold over the past several years, however, some advocacy groups have questioned whether marketers are using such tactics to dupe consumers into believing they are getting unbiased information.
In October 2005, Commercial Alert, an advertising and marketing watchdog group in Portland, Ore., petitioned the FTC to consider taking action
against word-of-mouth marketers. The group called for the FTC to issue guidelines requiring paid agents to disclose their relationship to the company whose product they are promoting, including any compensation.
The group cited a 2002 Wall Street Journal article on a marketing campaign by Sony Ericsson Mobile for its T68i mobile phone and digital camera. The initiative, called "Fake Tourist," involved placing 60 actors posing as tourists at attractions in New York and Seattle to demonstrate the camera phone. The actors asked passersby to take their photo, which demonstrated the camera phone's capabilities, but the actors did not identify themselves as representatives for Sony Ericsson.
Commercial Alert also singled out Tremor, a marketing division of Procter & Gamble, which has assembled a volunteer force of 250,000 teenagers to promote the company's products to friends and relatives.
Procter & Gamble spokesman Terry Loftus said participants in its word-of-mouth campaigns are free to talk negatively or positively about a product or service and do not receive compensation. Volunteers are not required to disclose their relationship with the company, he said. Some participants receive sample products, he said, so they can offer an opinion on a product.
Word-of-mouth advertising is already covered under existing FTC regulations that govern commercial endorsements. What the FTC sought to do yesterday in its staff opinion was to note that such marketing could be deceptive if consumers were more likely to trust the product's endorser "based on their assumed independence from the marketer."
"The petition to us did raise a question about compliance with the FTC act," said Mary K. Engle, FTC associate director for advertising practices. "We wanted to make clear . . . if you're being paid, you should disclose that."
The FTC said it would investigate cases where there is a relationship between the endorser of a product and the seller that is not disclosed and could affect the endorsement. The FTC staff said it would go after violators on a case-by-case basis. Consequences could include a cease-and-desist order, fines and civil penalties ranging from thousands of dollars to millions of dollars. Engle said the agency had not brought any cases against word-of-mouth marketers.
Though the staff's opinion fell short of Commercial Alert's original request, the group's executive director, Gary Ruskin, said he was pleased the staff agreed that word-of-mouth marketing could be deceptive.
"This letter tells marketers like Procter & Gamble that their 'sponsored consumers' must disclose that they are shilling, or they are probably in violation of the prohibition against deceptive advertising. That's big," he said. "It will change practices in the word-of-mouth marketing industry."
Andy Sernovitz, chief executive of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association, said the FTC's decision was an endorsement of the industry's efforts to police itself. The Chicago-based association, which has more than 300 members, last year issued a code of ethics stating that marketers should disclose ties to sponsors.
The group has also tried to hold members accountable. Sernovitz said the group is reviewing the membership status of the Edelman public relations firm after Wal-Mart, one of the firm's clients, reportedly gave positive comments to bloggers who then posted the comments without mentioning the source. Edelman later admitted that some of its employees had written the blogs.
Procter & Gamble, which is not a member of the association, recruits volunteer marketers online, Loftus said. The company chooses volunteers based on their answers to a survey on the Tremor Web site, which tells participants if they join the Tremor Crew they could "name the next big movie" or "help design a video game."
Peter Blackshaw, chief marketing officer for Nielsen BuzzMetrics, which tracks the effectiveness of word-of-mouth marketing, said brands have more than a moral incentive to be upfront with consumers. "There's a high turn-off factor if consumers learn that the person making a recommendation is actually on contract," with an incentive to push a product, he said.
A 2005 survey of 800 consumers by market research firm Intelliseek found that 29 percent of participants age 20 to 34 and 41 percent of those age 35 to 49 said they would be unlikely to trust a recommendation again from a friend whom they later learned was compensated for making the suggestion.
It's coming soon, my freind... To a theater near them...
Oh goody. Do you know who will sell the scalpedtickets"? I heard the theaters are sold out.
__________________
“There is a destiny that makes us all brothers: None goes his way alone.
What we put into the lives of others,
comes back into our own.”--Edwin Markham
Some CAPP members or potential CAPP members need to be aware that there are what appear to be dangerous psycho-nutjob-fruitcakes running amok who will be posting their business or website names, young children's, family members, employers names and calling them prostitutes, drug addicts, convicts, terrorists and anti-semite cyber-rapists etc. posting their pictures on a myriad of sites all over the internet, if given half a chance, (even your fake names/wrong or false pics or persons with the same name by whatever chance) , for example. (all without the slightest SHRED of truth or anything resembling any evidence or proof of such allegations)
I have always wondered about that timing of that attack on this board, and why CAPP members are targets of such harrassment? With some of them, there is a clear and continuing pattern to the stalking which extends over months and years and across several websites.
BTW, nearly 250,000 consumers have now been educated by those consumer awareness audio/visual/digital documents, and that number is growing in leaps and bounds by the day.
(that figure is only on one site, the "porno redirect" vids are also getting THOUSANDS of hits at an accordingly suitable venue)
The massive Trust & Safety forum Hack Attack video, which was pulled for whatever anti-free speech, anti-consumer rights reasons has also been viewed, downloaded, reposted and shared privately by quite a number of people.
250,000. ROCK ON! When Slandy announced that e-bay was trying to shut you down, I thought, good poodle, send them to Bud's door. He'll tell them the truth!!!