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If Google Reports It Then It HAS To Be True!
By: Frank Reed 2008-09-15 While this is not a story about intentional deception it is an incredible story about people being misled by the system of internet information gathering... ...that led to some significant pain for investors of one airline. Now admittedly I may look like I live under a rock because I did not see this story until it is being forensically reconstructed but I just had to say something about it. If this isnt a warning about how delicate all of this information age stuff is then I suppose there never will be one. So here it is as reported in both The Times and WSJ. Apparently, one curious late night / early morning researcher last weekend visited the South Florida Sun- Sentinels website and took a look at a story from 2002 which was about the bankruptcy filing of United Airlines. So far, this sounds pretty harmless, right? Well, since the Sun Sentinels system for updating top stories has apparently no filters, this story was bumped to the of Popular Stories in the business section. Now, along comes Google trolling its way across the net grabbing up all the latest news (apparently banking only on the reliability of the source itself to a large degree) and promptly displayed it in Google News. From the time that Google IDd this hot story from 2002 and then displayed in its Google News section as current was 3 minutes and 2 seconds. Then the you know what hit the fan. According to the Times article: A Florida investment firm found the story on Monday morning with a Google search and posted a summary on the Bloomberg financial information service. That visibility - Bloomberg is seen by thousands of investment managers and traders - sparked the run on United shares. The run on Uniteds shares mentioned here was to the tune of $1 billion (thats right, with a B). As a result of this story from 6 years ago, the value of Uniteds stock went from $12 to $3. United Airlines needed to do a little reputation work as a result. Eventually, the stock bounced back but not completely. As of this writing it is trading at $10.90 which is about the top range of where it has recovered from the glitch. Glitch? I know there are many, many untold stories of money lost and gained on this story that was the result of one persons search and the apparent inability of a paper and Google to correctly ID the story as 6 years old. There seems to be an almost cavalier attitude about this thing and I am amazed. Like I said I just found out about this today. There is a lot of finger pointing that is occurring between Google and the Tribune Co., owner of The Sun-Sentinel. The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has launched a preliminary probe into how this happened at what to do next. So is the paper wrong for not properly tagging the story (or at least not to Googles standards, God forbid) or is Google for not checking up? Google is playing the we just take what is given to us stance and the Tribune Co. is pointing fingers at Google. Oh, Bloomberg played a role in this too. I would highly recommend going to the Times article to get all the he said, she said on this one because it raises some interesting questions including who is responsible for this kind of error and is the Googlebot reliable just because its Googles? Interesting, for sure. Oh and how does this relate to internet marketing? Well, when your company that has a black mark in its past gets confused for the old version of itself and your online sales plummet because of the foul up then it will be pretty obvious. SMB Takeaway: Not everything you read is real and it can hurt you. Even though you may be a small / medium business,you are not shielded from bad information getting out into cyberspace and costing you money. SMBs HAVE to be concerned with what is being said about them online. Online reputation monitoring is for everyone. Thanks and have a great day! CommentsTag: Google, Reports, SEO Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Have a bookmark! - About the Author: Frank Reed's blog Frank Thinking About Internet Marketing provides practical advice and insight for Internet marketers from local SMB's to Fortune 500's. Frank provides Internet marketing services through FT Internet Marketing, Inc. In addition, Frank is a regular contributor to Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim and Mike Moran's Biznology blogs. |
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