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Net’s 10 most heinous hoaxes

Net’s 10 most heinous hoaxes

By:  IDG News Service  On: 16 Oct 2009 For: PC World Creator

A look at some of the meanest (and a few of the funniest) hoaxes on the Web

Most online hoaxes are mildly annoying, and a few are hilarious. But propagating a false AMBER Alert over Twitter? Plastering an epilepsy forum with flashing images? Not cool. We'll take a look at some of the Web's most heinous hoaxes over the years, and sprinkle in a handful of amusing ones.

Twitter/Facebook Amber Alert

The AMBER Alert system--a child abduction alert system broadcast over radio, TV, satellite radio, and other media whenever a child is abducted--was created after nine-year-old Amber Hagerman was abducted and murdered in Arlington, Texas, in 1996. Recently, some users have also broadcast alerts over text messages and Twitter.

Last July, someone tweeted an AMBER Alert for a three-year-old girl. People responded by spreading the alert as fast and as far as they could. It turned out to be a false alarm. A similar sequence of panicked, rapid-fire tweeting followed another false AMBER Alert occurred in September.

How heinous is this? Though we're glad that no abduction occurred in either case, there's a disturbing "cry wolf" aspect to the story--what happens the next time a real AMBER Alert goes out? For eroding the value of a potentially vital line of defense against child abduction, this hoax sets the platinum standard for repugnance.

Bonsai Kitten

Paging PETA: In 2001, a group of enterprising MIT grad students put together a little Web site called Bonsai Kitten, which detailed how to grow a kitten in a jar for aesthetic purposes.

The site included tips on how to insert a feeding tube and a waste removal tube, and where to drill air-holes "prior to kitten insertion." It also included a gallery of pictures of "Bonsai Kittens" and a guestbook filled with love (and hate) mail.

The site was so realistic that it caused uproar among kitty enthusiasts and animal rights activists (including the Humane Society), and it eventually gained enough notoriety that the FBI investigated the site's authenticity (or lack thereof). But since no kittens were actually harmed in the perpetration of this hoax, we think it tends more toward the hilarious than the heinous.

Epilepsy Forum Raid

Anonymous, a group of online pranksters, has been blamed for an array of notorious acts of Internet grief--from uploading porn on YouTube to launching denial-of-service attacks on Scientology sites. Some of the pranks they allegedly pulled are a bit more serious, however, such as the Epilepsy Forum Raid.


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idg news service IDG News Service is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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"Rules of Social Networking" -> always on the Network.
a good post over on computerworld:http://blogs.computerworld.com/rules_of_social_networking_what_took_so_longthe opening paragraph stood out: "remember back in the day when we worked from 9-5, nights and weekends were reserved for friends and family, and never the twain shall meet?"yup, that's gone. it must be a pain if you don't like your job or business.o

Comments (5)

brian sim-little
by brian sim-little 10/21/2009 10:03:59 AM

Since you have added the "login" requirement, the site is so slow, it's unuseable

andrew daviel.
by andrew daviel. 10/21/2009 3:45:00 PM

seems slow to me, too. First page was OK, before login.

andrew daviel.
by andrew daviel. 10/21/2009 3:45:29 PM

seems slow to me, too. First page was OK, before login.

paul saute
by paul saute 10/21/2009 9:22:33 PM

A+

All I have to say about this is

When I was young, BB était hothothot

Have you ever tried "le chat?" it tastes like rabbit LOL

paul saute
by paul saute 10/21/2009 9:24:39 PM

BUT i got a mail saying you're shutting down

Good luck and thanks a lot!

paulsaute

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