Nettime's_roving_reporter on Wed, 21 Jul 1999 21:51:49 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Web Wars |
this comes from the oil industry paper energy day... webwars... July 9 1999 ENERGY DAY 13 Tangled Web is a new weapon in war against the big hitters Corporate rebels are using the Internet to spread their single issue politics. Helen Cart surfs a virtual world of disinformation. The Internet is loved by many and loathed by some. But whatever your thoughts on it, you can't go away from it and still get ahead. It's a rarity among oil companies, however small or little known, to find one without a website, even if the information given on that site only extends to the company logo and a contact address. But it's a brave company which opens itself up to criticism, abuse and possible ridicule in the public domain. The use of the Internet as an open discussion centre, a free- for-all uncensored forum for praise or attack on a company, is a powerful and constantly developing phenomenon which some hope will serve the purpose of heightening a claim to be open, honest and accessible. Pressure groups have long known the value of the Web and have never failed to use it to their advantage. Activists who occupied Shell HQ earlier this year even used it to relay information and pictures via mobile phones and satellite technology to the outside world after Shell had responded to the intrusion by turning the power off. But it is not just the energy industry which comes under fire from these protectors. Common gripes of those attacking metal and minerals producers, as well as oil and gas firms, are alleged forced labour, backing of harsh military regimes, human rights abuses, and lack of environmental concern. BA, Nestle and McDo nald's are three of the non-oil "big names" which have come under the rebel fire. In the oft-criticised energy industry, action groups quickly realised that the fastest way to reach the widest audience is to create a website dedicated to their cause. Why mailshot a list of names when everyone knows that most unsolicited mail goes in the bin? "New websites are cropping up even day and there has been a big increase in the number of sites set up for dissident purposes," says Keith Mathieson of solicitors Davies Arnold Cooper. "It is an ideal way for people to get their message across very cheaply." Common countries highlighted are Nigeria, Myanmar (Burma), Colombia, India, Bangladesh and Angola and, as everyone who likes to while away time after the nine-to-five while appearing to be doing some real overtime will concur, the wily Web surfer can stumble upon some real gems. The statements below are all taken from the official website of a major oil company. Some are startling, some less so. Some may be true, many will not be. Some are written in genteel language, others in rather more flowery terms. All are open to public scrutiny. "It's sheer absurdity and a bizarre tragedy that (this company) is again blowing its trumpets on principled values and sustainable development. Whose (sic) standard of values other than its own double standards and who's to benefit from its SD initiatives other than its own capitalistic empire of ... bureaucrats?" "I was just thinking what an horrific lie is being propagated from your PR rooms to the people of the world, and what a disgustingly brutal company you are running... " "(This company) still practices its die-hard COLONIALISTIC overtures which have been deeply ingrained in the hangover brains of its arrogant expat exports! Sometimes it makes one wonder if (this company) treats overseas operating companies as dumping grounds for its brainwashed professionally-trained COLONIALISTS!!" "Open communication my foot! Within (this company) itself there is no sincerity in any openness at an and here you go telling the world how engaging and open you are .. what ********* can you all be! There then follows a reply from the company in question, emphasising its desire that the site remain uncensored to in crease "open communication" and expressing concern about schoolchildren who might be reading the site. The authors of some of the contributions to this particular website may appear two sandwiches short of a picnic and their accusations may well not have a grain of truth in them But what is important is that this company, a major multinational, allowed itself to be the subject of such defamation, by creating such a site where absolutely anyone can write abso lutely anything and have it seen by anyone with access to the Internet One such company is Shell, when, amid all the attacks on its social policy, human rights record and environmental performance, it took the step of establishing an online comments box where anything goes and, better still, every question/query/comment gets a response from Shell itself. Ari Miller of the Shell Internet team says: "The logic of the site is that we felt a lot of companies who have discussion forums censor them and we felt people would be reluctant to send in postings if they thought they were going to get cut up. We may have to have another look at the language that is being used and we have yet to take anything out " He says the site is a way for Shell to keep pace with the vast amount of material written about the company on the Web. "There are comments about Shell all over the Internet and you can't stop it happening We would rather see the comments and give our response to them. We want to be totally transparent " But what about the webpages which are run by opponents of a company? One such site, established by the Shell Shareholders Association, which has been offline as a case brought against Shell UK by John Donovan of Don Marketing, who alleges that the oil major stole his marketing ideas, is taken to the High Court. Donovan's shareholder group has previously said its most frequent visitors to its site are from Shell companies around the world "who must be astounded at what we have to say" Another website set up by rebel shareholders in the UK's Premier Oil appears to have been an excellent example in the use of the Internet as a tool to get a message across and a fine lesson in public relations, whatever the eventual outcome of the group's angry rantings about Premier's strategy and stock price. The professional and highly detailed site displays the CVs of a proposed new management team, the group's malaise with Premier's finances and investment strategy and its plans for Premier Oil's re- birth should the group, currently seeking an EGM, succeed in its bid to take over the company. Having said all that, gone are the days when that website was updated at intensely regular intervals. The site, it is claimed, has had just under 100,0v0 hits as at July 2 But it hasn't been updated since June 1; you have to keep the PR wagon rolling if you want to sustain the interest. "The web has proved itself to be not only a very public forum for conveying information but also a very democratic one," say the site's administrators "Information is disseminated at the same time not only to all the 23,000 shareholders of Premier but also to analysts, the Press and even the employees of Premier." The group estimates it has saved around �6,250 in the equivalent cost of sending mailings at the frequency of hits on its site, "a phenomenal return on the approximate �200 to date of disbursements spent on setting up and maintaining the site." It claims that Premier's institutional shareholders are some of the most regular visitors to the website, together with Premier itself and its financial advisers Schroders. The group has received a high level of exposure but could face trouble from Premier for using the company name. The group's founder, lawyer Dr Peter Felter, says it is still very much "there" and Premier's management "should continue to look over their shoulders nervously". A spokesman for Premier, meanwhile, says as far as the company itself is concerned, the whole sorry saga is history and Felter "has died a death". Lawyers say that the very Nature of the Internet often makes it difficult to track down the authors and publishers of potentially libellous material and for that reason, many companies are reluctant to try and take action. "A communication on the Internet is just as actionable as one which is posted," says Mathieson. "The difference is that you don't always know how to get hold of the people who are operating it; they may be doing it from their backroom One solution is to take action against the service provider. Once they have been notified that the contents of a site carried by the server is potentially libellous, they can be held liable." The regulations concerning use of a company name are hazy, however, and largely boil down to whether a dissident group was seeking to benefit from the reputation and goodwill associated with an established name or whether the name or logo is already registered as a trademark. Successful action becomes even more difficult if the dissident group makes it clear that the site has no connection with and is not authorised by the target company, as Felter and his team have done. Perhaps targeted companies hope that fewer people see the Net than the newspaper; the latter can just be picked up after all, whereas the Internet does need some degree of patient navigation. But with estimates putting Internet usage at 83m people in Europe alone by 2002, perhaps companies had better keep looking over their shoulders after all. As Dallas, Texas-based Wavo Corp's web monitoring service WebWatch puts it; "The Web is the fastest communications medium on earth. Within seconds of a change to a web page, the new information is accessible to users all over the world "Which is a real advantage when you are communicating. And a real headache when you're trying to monitor that communication." A lesson to be learned? # distributed via nettime-l: no commercial use without permission of author # <nettime> is a moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # un/subscribe: [email protected] and # "un/subscribe nettime-l you@address" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org/ contact: <[email protected]>