I
Was a Paid Internet Shill
01 October 2012
I Was a Paid Internet Shill
2012 OCTOBER
1
Posted
by Steve Beckow
I Was
a Paid Internet Shill
Ex-Shill,
April 3, 2012, Above Top Secret,
I
am writing here to come out of the closet as a paid shill. For a little over
six months, I was paid to spread disinformation and argue political points on
the Internet. This site, ATS, was NOT one that I was assigned to post on,
although other people in the same organization were paid to be here, and I
assume they still walk among you. But more on this later.
I
quit this job in the latter part of 2011, because I became disgusted with it,
and with myself. I realized I couldn’t look myself in the mirror anymore. If
this confession triggers some kind of retribution against me, so be it. Part of
being a real man in this world is having real values that you stand up for, no
matter what the consequences.
My
story begins in early 2011. I had been out of work for almost a year after
losing my last job in tech support. Increasingly desperate and despondent, I
jumped at the chance when a former co-worker called me up and said she had a
possible lead for me. “It is an unusual job, and one that requires secrecy. But
the pay is good. And I know you are a good writer, so its something you are
suited for.” (Writing has always been a hobby for me).
She
gave me only a phone-number and an address, in one of the seedier parts of San
Francisco, where I live. intrigued, I asked her for the company’s URL and some
more info. She laughed. “They don’t have a website. Or even a name. You’ll see.
Just tell them I referred you.” Yes, it sounded suspicious, but long-term
joblessness breeds desperation, and desperation has a funny way of overlooking
the suspicious when it comes to putting food on the table.
The
next day, I arrived at the address – the third floor in a crumbling building.
The appearance of the place did not inspire confidence. After walking down a
long, filthy linoleum-covered corridor lit by dimly-flickering halogen, I came
to the entrance of the office itself: a crudely battered metal door with a sign
that said “United Amalgamated Industries, Inc.”
I later learned that this “company” changed its name
almost monthly, always using bland names like that which gave no strong
impression of what the company actually does. Not too hopeful, I went inside.
The interior was equally shabby. There were a few long tables with folding
chairs, at which about a dozen people were tapping away on old, beat-up
computers. There were no decorations or ornaments of any type: not even the
standard-issue office fica trees or plastic ferns. What a dump. Well, beggars
can’t be choosers.
The
manager, a balding man in his late forties, rose from the only stand-alone desk
in the room and came forward with an easy smile. “You must be Chris. Yvette [my
ex-co-worker] told me you’d be coming.” [Not our real names]. “Welcome. Let me
tell you a little about what we do.” No interview, nothing. I later learned
they took people based solely on referral, and that the people making the
referrals, like my ex-colleague Yvette, were trained to pick out candidates
based on several factors including ability to keep one’s mouth shut, basic
writing skills, and desperation for work.
We
sat down at his desk and he began by asking me a few questions about myself and
my background, including my political views (which were basically
non-existent). Then he began to explain the job. “We work on influencing
people’s opinions here,” is how he described it. The company’s clients paid
them to post on Internet message boards and popular chartrooms, as well as in
gaming forums and social networks like Facebook and MySpace. Who were these
clients? “Oh, various people,” he said vaguely. “Sometimes private companies,
sometimes political groups.”
Satisfied
that my political views were not strong, he said I would be assigned to
political work. “The best people for this type of job are people like you,
without strong views,” he said with a laugh. “It might seem counterintuitive,
but actually we’ve found that to be the case.” Well, OK. Fine. As long as it
comes with a steady paycheck, I’d believe whatever they wanted me to believe,
as the guy in Ghostbusters said.
After
discussing pay (which was much better than I’d hoped) and a few other details,
he then went over the need for absolute privacy and secrecy. “You can’t tell
anyone what we do here. Not your wife, not your dog.” (I have neither, as it
happens.) “We’ll give you a cover story and even a phone number and a fake
website you can use. You will have to tell people you are a consultant. Since
your background is in tech support, that will be your cover job. Is this going
to be a problem for you?” I assured him it would not. “Well, OK. Shall we get
started?”
“Right
now?” I asked, a bit taken aback.
“No
time like the present!” he said with a hearty laugh.
The rest of the day was taken up with
training. Another staff member, a no-nonsense woman in her thirties, was to be
my trainer, and training would only last two days. “You seem like a bright guy,
you’ll get the hang of it pretty fast, I think,” she said. And indeed, the job
was easier than I’d imagined. My task was simple: I would be assigned to four
different websites, with the goal of entering certain discussions and promoting
a certain view. I learned later that some of the personnel were assigned to
internet message boards (like me), while others worked on Facebook or
chatrooms. It seems these three types of media each have different strategy for
shilling, and each shill concentrates on one of the three in particular.
My
task? “To support Israel and counter anti-Israeli, anti-Semitic posters.” Fine
with me. I had no opinions one way or another about Israel, and who likes
anti-Semites and Nazis? Not me, anyway. But I didn’t know too much about the
topic. “That’s OK,” she said. “You’ll pick it up as you go along. For the most
part, at first, you will be doing what we call “meme-patrol.” This is pretty
easy. Later if you show promise, we’ll train you for more complex arguments,
where more in-depth knowledge is necessary.”
She
handed me two binders with sheets enclosed in limp plastic. The first was
labeled simply “Israel” in magic-marker on the cover, and it had two sections
.The first section contained basic background info on the topic. I would have
to read and memorize some of this, as time went on. It had internet links for
further reading, essays and talking points, and excerpts from some history
books. The second, and larger, section was called “Strat” (short for
“strategy”) with long lists of “dialogue pairs.” These were specific responses
to specific postings.
If
a poster wrote something close to “X,” we were supposed to respond with
something close to “Y.” “You have to mix it up a bit, though,” said my trainer.
“Otherwise it gets too obvious. Learn to use a thesaurus.” This section also
contained a number of hints for de-railing conversations that went too far away
from what we were attempting. These strategies included various forms of
personal attacks, complaining to the forum moderators, smearing the characters
of our opponents, using images and icons effectively, and even dragging the
tone of the conversation down with sexual innuendo, links to pornography, or
other such things. “Sometimes we have to fight dirty,” or trainer told us. “Our
opponents don’t hesitate to, so we can’t either.”
The
second binder was smaller, and it contained information specific to the web
sites I would be assigned to. The sites I would work were: Godlike Productions,
Lunatic Outpost, CNN news, Yahoo News, and a handful of smaller sites that
rotated depending on need. As stated, I was NOT assigned to work ATS (although
others in my group were), which is part of the reason I am posting this here,
rather than elsewhere. I wanted to post this on Godlike Productions at first,
but they have banned me from even viewing that site for some reason (perhaps
they are onto me?). But if somebody connected with this site can get the
message to them, I think they should know about it, because that was the site I
spent a good 70% of my time working on.
The
site-specific info in the second binder included a brief history each site,
including recent flame-wars, as well as info on what to avoid on each site so
as not to get banned. It also had quite detailed info on the moderators and the
most popular regged posters on each site: location (if known), personality
type, topics of interest, background sketch, and even some notes on how to
“push the psychological buttons” of different posters. Although I didn’t work
for ATS, I did see they had a lot of info on your so-called “WATS” posters here
(the ones with gold borders around their edges). “Focus on the popular
posters,” my trainer told me. “These are the influential ones. Each of these is
worth 50 to 100 of the lesser known names.”
Each
popular poster was classified as “hostile,” “friendly,” or “indifferent” to my
goal. We were supposed to cultivate friendship with the friendly posters as
well as the mods (basically, by brownnosing and sucking up), and there were
even notes on strategies for dealing with specific hostile posters. The info
was pretty detailed, but not perfect in every case. “If you can convert one of
the hostile posters from the enemy side to our side, you get a nice bonus. But
this doesn’t happen too often, sadly. So mostly you’ll be attacking them and
trying to smear them.”
At first, like I said, my job was
“meme-patrol.” This was pretty simple and repetitive; it involved countering
memes and introducing new memes, and didn’t demand much in-depth knowledge of
the subject. Mostly just repetitive posting based on the dialogue pairs in the
“Strat” section of the first binder. A lot of my job was de-railing and
spamming threads that didn’t go our way, or making accusations of racism and
anti-Semitism. Sometimes I had to simply lie and claim a poster said something
or did something “in another thread” they really hadn’t said or done I felt bad
about this…but in the end I felt worse about the possibility of losing the
first job I’d been able to get since losing my “real” job.
The
funny thing was, although I started the job with no strong opinions or
political views, after a few weeks of this I became very emotionally wedded to
the pro-Israel ideas I was pushing. There must be some psychological factor at
work…a good salesman learns to honestly love the products he’s selling, I
guess. It wasn’t long before my responses became fiery and passionate, and I
began to learn more about the topic on my own. “This is a good sign,” my
trainer told me. “It means you are ready for the next step: complex debate.”
The
“complex debate” part of the job involved a fair amount of additional training,
including memorizing more specific information about the specific posters
(friendly and hostile) I’d be sparring with. Here, too, there were scripts and
suggested lines of argument, but we were given more freedom. There were a lot
of details to this more advanced stage of the job – everything from how to
select the right avatar to how to use “demotivationals” (humorous images with
black borders that one finds floating around the web). Even the proper use of
images of cats was discussed. Sometimes we used faked or photo-shopped images
or doctored news reports (something else that bothered me).
I
was also given the job of tying to find new recruits, people “like me” who had
the personality type, ability to keep a secret, basic writing/thinking skills,
and desperation necessary to sign on a shill. I was less successful at this
part of the job, though, and I couldn’t find another in the time I was there.
After
a while of doing this, I started to feel bad. Not because of the views I was
pushing (as I said, I was first apolitical, then pro-Israel), but because of
the dishonesty involved. If my arguments were so correct, I wondered, why did
we have to do this in the first place? Shouldn’t truth propagate itself
naturally, rather than through, well…propaganda? And who was behind this
whole operation, anyway? Who was signing my paychecks? The stress of lying to
my parents and friends about being a “consultant” was also getting to me.
Finally, I said enough was enough. I quit in September 2011. Since then I’ve
been working a series of unglamorous temp office jobs for lower pay. But at
least I’m not making my living lying and heckling people who come online to express
their views and exercise freedom of speech.
A
few days ago I happened to be in the same neighborhood and on a whim thought
I’d check out the old office. It turns out the operation is gone, having moved
on. This, too, I understood, is part of their strategy: Don’t stay in the same
place for too long, don’t keep the same name too long, move on after half a
year or so. Keeping a low profile, finding new employees through word of mouth:
All this is part of the shill way of life. But it is a deceptive way of life,
and no matter how noble the goals (I remain pro-Israel, by the way), these
sleazy means cannot be justified by the end.
This
is my confession. I haven’t made up my mind yet about whether I want to talk
more about this, so if I don’t respond to this thread, don’t be angry. But I
think you should know: Shills exist. They are real. They walk among you, and
they pay special attention to your popular gold-bordered WATS posters. You
should be aware of this. What you choose to do with this awareness is up to
you.
Yours,
ExShill
http://soundofheart.org/galacticfreepress/content/i-was-paid-internet-shill
2 comments:
And we're supposed to just...take a semi-anonymous poster's word for it? We're supposed to just believe he worked as a 'shill' with absolutely no evidence to back him up?
C'mon now.
Well, lets think this through. We all know there are paid shills on these blogs. Heck, we even know that many alternative blogs are shills themselves. The whole blog. There is CLG on the left and Newsmax on the right. So what he is saying is credible. What made me believe him is his description of how it works and I blog, so I know how blogging on the inside works. I have had shills on my site and certain subjects, and that is how it looks. There is a progression to their shilling from simple harassment and name calling to quoting and showing other shill links to support arguments against the truth. So keep an open mind.
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