Streisand Effect
Selasa, 10 Desember 2013
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The Internet has always been a playground for all kinds of people, governed by
rather unusual rules. Rules that don't really make any sense at first, but
actually point out the deviousness of the human mind. One such 'rule' is called
the Streisand effect.
The Streisand effect
Reverse psychology can certainly be one of the most commonly occurring and
entertaining mental phenomenon. If performed right, one can get almost anything
done from others. The same principle applies when one tries to hide something,
or tries to defend oneself from seemingly menial remarks. Why do you think
WikiLeaks is hailed by the public and attacked by the Government? Because
WikiLeaks forms one of the biggest examples of the act of trying to reveal
something that is desperately hidden. Now that is only an indirect example of
the Streisand effect. A full blown analogy would be where the entire public itself
tries to uncover something that someone doesn't want you to see.
Definition of the Streisand Effect
A phenomenon in which attempting to suppress information attracts even more
unwanted attention, thereby increasing its magnitude of exposure.
Although the degree of the original exposure doesn't matter, a lot of cases
that fall under the Streisand effect can be considered to be small and
irrelevant in the long run, if they had gone uncontested. It is only after the
attempt to hide, that the matter is blown ridiculously out of proportion. In
the Age of the Internet where the public wants to know (and the media gladly
complies and encourages) everything from celebrity underwear to the secret NASA
space programs, the Streisand effect has found a permanent place, thanks to
people who underestimate it.
Streisand's Incident
We can find similar examples throughout history, to be frank. Yet why is it
that this phenomenon is named after one of the contemporary celebrities? Well
it has a lot to do with the celebrity's fame, and the fact that the incident
happened with comedic results.
It all started in 2003. Photographer Kenneth Adelman was given the
responsibility of clicking photos of the California coastline for signs of
coastal erosion. Image 3850 on the California Coastal Records Project is just
one of the 12,000 such photos taken by Kenneth. It just so happened that the
photo included the Malibu beach house of Barbra Streisand. Her lawyers found
out about the photo and immediately sent a cease-and-desist letter to the
respective office and ordered them to take the photo off their site. The site
refused, and Barbra sued. The court dismissed the case, but the issue became
instantly popular, and now everyone wanted to see the photograph.
What makes the story even more remarkable is the fact that the image was
previously downloaded from that site a mere six times, two of which were by
Streisand's lawyers! And after the lawsuit the photograph was viewed by more
than 420,000 visitors. And that is why Mike Masnick from Techdirt called the
phenomenon, the Streisand effect.
Psychology Behind the Streisand Effect
There really isn't much to debate here. This class act of reverse psychology
takes the cake simply because although it's so obvious, it flawlessly occurs every
time. I mean come on(!), if I told you don't see what's in the secret shiny box
wrapped in gift paper, you're going to do everything in your power to do
exactly that! If a kid tells his playground bullies to stop calling him a name,
they are going to yell it out at him. Just realizing that knowing something
about someone is detrimental to their status and respectability, we will want
to know that piece of information. This is one bit of human nature that lawyers
should be well-acquainted with, but a few of them fail to grasp it.
Examples
There is no shortage of examples of the effect. You may personally try to
recollect such instances in your own life, or the life of an acquaintance. Here
are some examples with relatively simple beginnings and rather hellish
outcomes. At least for the targets.
NeverSeconds
Nine-year-old schoolgirl Martha Payne created a simple blog called
'NeverSeconds'. She intended to make posts about the meals that her school
served everyone. For her first post, she took a photo of what was barely a
filling meal by anyone's standards. With the photo, she filled a comment,
"The good thing about this blog is Dad understands why I am hungry when I
get home." It was not her intent to 'expose' the problem, in fact I don't
even think she saw it as an actual problem. But as the blog got a few hits from
family and neighbors, they demanded the authority concerned, the Argyll and
Bute Council, for a full briefing of the problem. The incident became local and
successively international news. But it did not go too far, until the Argyll
and Bute Council banned little Martha from taking pictures of the school meals
and posting it on her blog. Once the media found this out (Martha had posted a
supposedly final post called 'Goodbye', explaining everything), things went
from bad to worse for the council. Meanwhile, the blog now has more than 9.5
million page views. Martha even got to meet the famous chef Jamie Oliver. She
expanded her blog by including pictures of school meals taken by other kids from
all over the world, like Germany and Japan.
McLibel
The McLibel case, officially known as 'McDonald's Corporation v Steel &
Morris', was the longest-running case in English history. The whole thing
started in 1986 and ended in 2005.
Members of the London Greenpeace, Helen Steel and David Morris, along with a
few others, began distributing pamphlets titled What's Wrong with McDonald's:
Everything they don't want you to know. It revealed certain aspects of the
fast-food chain that could be considered bad for their image. Indeed, two of
the allegations were 'torture and murder of animals' and 'exploitation of
workers and banning of unions'. McDonald's Corporation did not like it, and
sued them for libel.
The original reach of the campaigners was almost nothing: they were
distributing pamphlets at just one outlet in the U.K., out of thousands. It
would barely have turned the heads of about a handful of people who the
pamphlets were handed out to. But thanks to some witless "assistance"
by McDonald's, the allegations got international coverage. Now everyone knew
about what the complaints were. In fact, the ruling judge concluded that some
of the points on the pamphlet were quite true. McDonald's and its army of
lawyers were up against two people who could barely come up with enough money
to fight their case, and the whole world knew about it.
Beyoncé
The Super Bowl Halftime Show in February 2013 had Beyoncé performing some of
her most famous tracks. Now when press photographers take pictures at live
events, it's obvious that some photographs are not really meant to be shown to
the public. Stars in unflattering light is never appreciated by the stars, but
can be made into something weirdly popular by the media. So when a site posted
all such awkward photos of Beyoncé's performance, her promoters hated them, and
ordered the site to take them down. But wouldn't you know it, the public
thronged the page to see all that Beyoncé was not supposed to look like.
Trafigura
Trafigura is a Dutch trading company, which was involved in a toxic waste dump
case in Ivory Coast, West Africa. The company openly claimed that the waste was
harmless and would pose no threat. Soon, thousands of people started getting
sick and a reported 17 people died of poisoning. Trafigura was sued for
negligence and a legal battle followed. The issue was largely unnoticed by the
media except for The Guardian. Trafigura thought it would be smart to file for
a "secret" super-injunction against The Guardian, banning them from
ever mentioning the incident in their paper. The press agency complied, but
proceeded to publish an article that revealed that they were unable to provide
hidden information to the public about a "certain company" and a
"certain incident". Other papers quickly deduced that the culprit was
Trafigura. What followed was a large-scale information distribution of
everything that Trafigura was trying to hide. Talk about shooting yourself in
the foot.
Scorpions
Art, literature, and music have always given prime examples of the Streisand
effect. If your parents tell you not to listen to Judas Priest, you're going to
listen to them. One of the best examples include the rock band Scorpions.
In 1976, Scorpions came out with an album called "Virgin Killer". The
cover album included a model under 18 years of age, posing nude. The Wikipedia
article for the same album included this cover image. The Internet Watch
Foundation (IWF) put the Wikipedia page in their child pornography blacklist.
When the IWF displayed the list in 2008, the album's page became one of
Wikipedia's most popular one. The IWF acknowledged this effect and immediately
removed the page from their list.
Citizen Kane
The final example in the article is actually a reversal of the Streisand
effect. The movie's lead character, Charles Foster Kane, was largely based on
William Randolph Hearst. Hearst was a very powerful and influential newspaper
tycoon. When he found out about Citizen Kane, he flipped, and wanted the movie
to be shut down. But of course, telling people not to watch the movie would
only make them want to watch it even more, is what William Hearst thought. So
instead of banning the movie, he forbade anyone to publish reviews and
photographs in the newspaper, or even mention the movie's name in public. It
worked quite well; Citizen Kane bombed, thanks to Hearst's considerable reach.
Despite that, the movie did gain favorable reviews in papers Hearst had no
control over, and as history has it, the movie became one of the most important
works in all of cinema.
Man has experienced the Streisand effect ever since the birth of mass
communication. Indeed, one of the oldest known ones was when the Vatican banned
Copernicus' book, 'De revolutionibus orbium coelestium' in 1616, and instantly
a reprinted version was issued. Some people even try to manipulate the results
of the Streisand effect, trying to achieve defamation by higher peers and the
consequent attention. Well, if you can't be famous, you can still be infamous!
By Syafitri Rahmania Ulfah
Reference Prabhu, Arun. (2012). Article Psychology. Buzzle.com
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