An interesting campaign by comments
Like most bloggers, I get spam comments – boring and annoying but that’s the way it is. Luckily, I have plugins so don’t often see all the spam that comes in.
Occasionally I do glance through what has been filtered as spam to check things are on track. Recently, a found a number of comments in the spam filter that were a bit different.
Using comments to get a message spread
Leaving comments in a blog can of course be one way to share your message, and attract traffic back to your site to really explain what is important to you.
But this is the first time I have seen someone set up bulk comments (and I assume it was automated so probably has been sent to many blogs) in order to make their point of view heard.
This isn’t a commercial message, either (although their site could be monetised of course) so it really stood out to me.
Imagine if do-it-in-a-dress, World Vision, Kiva, Greenpeace or any other charity or community group used this tactic – see why I thought this was unusual?
Sharing negative messages
The comments I noticed were criticisms of a writing site
The commenter’s name was even entered as derogative terms against that service so they were definitely keen to ruin the company’s name.
I didn’t click on the link provided as I have no desire to read a diatribe against another service, plus I don’t trust links in spammy comments!
Personally, I have not looked at the named site but I have heard of it. I know some people have found it useful for finding writing projects while the details I have heard concern me and others (the pay rate is apparently ridiculously low so clients can’t assume they are getting quality results and it is not respecting the writers’ time and effort).
I don’t like what I know about that service and similar ones but I have never heard they are dishonest about the pay rates so each to their own.
I agree that the uninformed may be influenced by such sites to work for well under reasonable pay rates because they don’t know any different. It is fair to let new writer’s understand the industry.
It isn’t right to spam the internet with claims of scam and fraud about another company.
So what’s the middle ground?
How can you share a warning with people without crossing legal boundaries and without damaging your own reputation?