Friday, June 13, 2008

Fighting Lies and Rumors On The Web

How do you handle lies and rumors about your client, your lawsuit or your firm? Do you have a strategy when gossip appears in the blogosphere?

Rumors have always been around. But in the age of social media, they have become far more dangerous. A tiny bit of gossip can begin as a spark on an unknown blog and spread within hours to the mainstream media, creating a public relations wildfire that can do real damage to your case.

In politics, the rumor that Michelle Obama once used the word "whitey" to disparage Obama's critics during the Jeremy Wright controversy has emerged. Rather than ignore these rumors, Obama's social media savvy team has launched a Web site called fightthesmears.com.

Here's what the presumptive Democratic nominee said in the hours leading up the launch of the site:

"We have seen this before. There is dirt and lies that are circulated in e-mails, and they pump them out long enough until finally you, a mainstream reporter, asks me about it. That gives legs to the story."

It's a profoundly simple site, as it should be. Lies are displayed on the home page, followed by "facts." To boost the campaign's side of the story, the Web site offers links to conservative bloggers who have also dispelled the rumor.

The most grabby section of fightthesmears.com is entitled, "Who's behind the lies." Here, Obama's truth squad attempts to trace the origin of the rumor.

As the site explains, the rumored "whitey" video tape appears to be a work of fiction lifted "almost word for word from a novel published in 2006."

Fightthesmears.com could be easily replicated on a clients' or a firm's newsroom page. The trick will be to convince decision makers the old-school "no comment" convention doesn't work anymore. Today in our inter-connected world, acknowledging the rumors and lies and dispelling them doesn't spread misinformation, much like a virus, it inoculates it.

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