Phony press releases have become the grist for the newest Internet profit mills. If you're like Chris Anderson and us, you don't read press releases. But several tech blogs were taken in by a dubious press release issued by a nonexistent company allegedly backed by real investors who may or may not have invested in several fake companies. Huh? Exactly. How the scam was uncovered, how it works, and how to avoid falling victim after the jump.
Although there's evidence of many fake press releases floating around the Internet, the scam first came to the attention of Silicon Alley Insider because one particular release mentioned Internet television, a must-cover topic on its beat. But "the world's first broadcast-quality Internet television service" raising an alleged $45 million, profitable and yet no one's heard of it? SAI managing editor Peter Kafka's eyebrows were raised.
Alas, no eyebrow raisings took place at VentureBeat or PEHub, which were suckered despite PaidContent's observation that the HD AmeriTV announcement was a ripoff of a Joost release.
The confusion was exacerbated when these bloggers contacted First Mutual Credit, the only real company listed as an investor for confirmation. Two separate sources initially confirmed First Mutual's investment, but the New Zealand company has since denied any involvement. (Maybe it was that strong Kiwi accent.)
Several other fake companies and fake press releases have been identified. But what is the scam in advertising a nonexistent company? Peter Kafka, who has been closely tracking the story for Silicon Alley Insider, is stumped, but we think he's already stumbled upon the answer: Fake press releases get picked up by a host of PR-aggregating sites that profit off of Google AdSense ads.
Fake blogs already remix existing blog posts to generate nonsensical pages that nonetheless turn up in Google search results and display Google-sold ads targeted to relevant keywords. Press releases filled with buzzwords make even more lucrative fodder for AdSense.
So who makes money here? Press release aggregators like PR Leap would never admit it, but their cash register rings whether or not their press releases are accurate. And the perpetrators of the HD AmeriTV press release? There's no proof, but we smell a search-engine optimization scam, where they get paid by clients to try to improve the ranking of websites by seeding the Web with fake pages.
There's a simple solution, of course: don't read press releases ... real or fake.












Comments
Tim, our creditability and reputation is something we take seriously at PR Leap. The people behind these press releases paid to send them out via PR Leap using a paypal account tied to First Mutual Credit. After Peter contacted us, we sent an email to Mr. Leisenberg and Mr. Morgan inquiring about the validity of the releases. We simultaneously took down all releases associated with this account and they are still offline. To this day, we have not heard from Mr. Leisenberg, Mr. Morgan or anyone from First Mutual Credit.
Over 30,000 companies use PR Leap to send out real news releases, including several billion dollar companies. We receive an average of 200 submissions daily, of which 20 percent are placed on editorial hold for not being newsworthy and various other reasons.
As for no one reading press releases, Gawker Media reads PR Leap press releases, here are two post where Gawker and Valleywag linked to PR Leap:
[gawker.com]
[valleywag.com]
-Merrick from PR Leap
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