>When Instagram decided to shutdown about 30 accounts related to cannabis last year, a former employee tried charging people up to $7,500 to reactivate them since he still had access to the feature. He was found out, and his access was officially terminated, according to James.
I've had multiple accounts deactivated for cannabis, and seen hundreds of other weedy IGs deleted -- while businesses like the official High Times sit loftily at over 1 million followers AND verified. It doesn't surprise me that there are shady backdoor deals going on.
I run a cannabis company in CA. After seeing my friend's account reactivated a few months ago he told me he paid 3k for the service. When that IG employee got fired there were 5 cannabusiness accounts I knew of that were deleted on the same day. All people who paid the restoration fee.
To the comments below who think IG isn't that important--I close upwards of $40,000 of monthly recurring revenue from IG outreach every month. It's value can't be understated.
Presumably paying 15kUsD for a blue spot is worth it for some -fashion industry etc - and the investment will pay for itself.
I never heard of the blue spot being particularly important though, my understanding was that parading an effortlessly fashionable and beautiful life was what got the attention.
The whole idea of someone staging most of their life to impress people on the internet, makes me physically uncomfortable to think about - even before considering the fact that they have "fans", which makes the whole thing even more awkward. It's like "reality" TV and celebrity worship taken to a whole new level of depressing and shallow.
The rate card on the Bloomberg article says it all: get enough 'followers' and you are into big money. Whether those followers are real, bots, or created by insiders at Instagram is open to examination.
Gary Vaynerchuk and his company Vaynermedia have played a role in making the big advertising holding companies see perceived value in 'influencer relations'. Vaynerchuk's (2.2 million followers) instagram presence reminds me of Chairman Mao's little red book, with endless exhortations to strive and succeed.
https://www.instagram.com/garyvee/?hl=en
Glassdoor suggests a different reality at his company
https://www.glassdoor.com/Reviews/VaynerMedia-Reviews-E48244...
> Vaynerchuk's (2.2 million followers) instagram presence reminds me of Chairman Mao's little red book, with endless exhortations to strive and succeed. https://www.instagram.com/garyvee/?hl=en
I don't even have words for that one - but that profile definitely wouldn't leave me thinking "I should do business with this person".
"We think too small, like the frog at the bottom of the well. He thinks the sky is only as big as the top of the well. If he surfaced, he would have an entirely different view" Mao Zedong
Man it is very simple. The advertisement does not want to actively "sell the product", companies want to "sell a lifestyle" - that's where instagram comes in.
It is a very old concept, I don't get why people are so shocked.
Because it's destroying culture. People see value in places where there is no value. Everything is faked to the end with no imagination. If you are not immune, you better consume !
Who are you to decide that there is no value in it? People are clicking, reading, and engaging. People obviously enjoy doing it. Who are you to tell them that what they're doing is wrong?
People are use and enjoy hard drug as well, I'm all against drug war, but it does effects their families and society, and if the use of drug was as wide spread as social media.
We would have had a very different society.
I agree with you that who are we to tell they're wrong though.
It's blatantly a form of snob-elitism that hides behind claims that it's about protecting culture (whose culture?).
The same people that say Instagram is destroying culture or makes them ill, look down upon the daily living habits of 'average' people: TV viewing habits, tabloid-style reading (which today is BoredPanda & 22words type sites), Kardashian-ism, celebrity fascination, all the way on to food preferences and beliefs.
That snobbery is as old as human history no doubt.
I'd say it's like celebrities advertising products all the time, and then being exposed to updates through social media under the implied context that it's relatively candid time.
Of course, social media can and usually is doctored, but influencer culture definitely takes celebrity product endorsement and plays it out to its logical conclusion.
The dust hasn't quite settled, but everyone using social media to stunt on others does affect the mental health of people who consistently use these platforms. I'd say that it negatively impacts culture because it promotes building these facades and advertising said facades.
I don't see the point of having a "select" verification on social networks. It should be for everyone, like a bank where you verify using ID and a webcam... it could even be a paid service.
Making them exclusive and intransparent is shady. Just like username colors on social platforms where people pay $15,000 to make them look special.
Agreed 100%. Why not do things like how Google Webmaster Tools does it, where you fill in a form, get a file to post on your website and have it auto verify based on that? Or for those who aren't website/service owners, a system where you verify your name or address?
The current exclusive system on sites like Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and others is awkward and makes no real sense whatsoever. Same with the also awkward trend of 'deverifying' people that say something 'offensive' or 'brek the rules'. You don't stop being the same person when you upset someone.
Really, sites and social networks need to just treat verification like anything else.
That’s because it’s not for verification; It’s a status symbol.
Also, this is just speculation, but if saying certain things could get you unverified, and being unverified would lower your ranking some places and hurt your value, a website could censor what they deem “hate” speech simply with the threat of unverification. You can’t really cry censorship over a little icon.
Yeah, it's definitely a status symbol as it is now.
But my question remains the same. Why treat it like a status symbol?
I don't see a reason why this should be something fancy that only an elite few should have. Why not have a different system for marking elite users which is based on some sort of merit (or actual real world worth) rather than just a vague sense of name recognition?
Just seems like they're misusing the concept, and that a system which does away with the 'prestige' aspect of verification would do equally well on a user level.
It could be federated, basically the same API could be implemented or a common implementation can be used by a number of service providers...still not sure though what federation by itself adds to the core solution.
I am the developer and have tried so far in vain to get the IRS to integrate. The IRS is the single largest data source for basic identity attributes in the US so integrating that would essentially allow almost every adult in the US to be able to leverage it.
I have developed a Chrome extension to allow the use of IRS tax transcript information but obviously it is a very high bar considering the sensitivity of that information.
One interesting way for secure identification is using local government-issued certificates. In Kazakhstan every citizen can request a digital certificate which is signed by a central authority. Many other countries use similar technologies. Those certificates could be used for identification.
But I believe that there are laws about storing people's information, so you might have to comply with that.
Korea has something like this too. Any citizen can pay a small fee to get a digital verification cert, which contains a private-public key pair and a digital authentication signature from a trusted authority, who has been vetted by a nationwide system. Alternatively, one can sign up for a bank account and get a cert for free. This is used to login to online banking stuff, government business (taxes etc) and online activity.
Fun thing is that the trust tree terminates at the government or via a trust web made by the banks. The reason for this is that when they were making the system, the academics and government officials had a bit of a disagreement and made two systems.
Korean crypto is pretty crazy. Read about XEED and the decade long battle with MS ActiveX.
The firm attempts to use that value to make the platform itself more valuable. The employee captures it more directly, because fuck the platform. Many problems in business are principal-agent problems.
If Instagram were, say a government space, this would be called corruption; but, it is a private company operating a defacto public space, so it is seen as...employees disobeying their employer? Or what?
This is precisely the issue with company operated spaces: when there is shady crap going down, there's no accountability.
Hmm, interesting. I think this one is more "buyer beware".
Government corruption is a when a missile manufacturer donates heavily to a pro-war candidate, and then that candidate ends up in the cabinet. 6 months later, bombing campaigns are in full force.
A private company, or a private employee, selling eyeballs, legitimacy, and influence... it's extremely flawed, but I'm not sure it has a horrifically large effect on the world.
I concur the effect on the world is rather small here, the closest analogy I can think of are non-competitive bidding for a local park's construction that goes to the governor's friend. Another was Chris Christie lounging on a beach that was closed to the public. The latter is politically distasteful, but really didn't hurt anyone. It still was corruption of a sort.
Not to justify his overall behavior, or the idea of 'closing' a beach when nothing is wrong with it, but being in his backyard is not really an abuse of power.
There's a massive, critical distinction in most cases.
Government money is public tax payer money that is forcibly taken from the people's income to provide government services.
Facebook's money is private shareholder money, most of which is derived from voluntary business transactions from advertisers.
There's an entirely different responsibility between the two instances. If you're going to forcibly take money from people's incomes to deliver government services, your responsibility to do right by those tax payers is drastically greater in my opinion.
This would come under bribery and I'm pretty sure it can be prosecuted if Instagram wants to. They may not want to prosecute due to the negative attention it would attract.
And I wouldn't be surprised to learn one day that some facebook employees would be running face recognitions for private detectives... Human nature is what it is.
Pretty sure this type of thing happens everywhere - years ago I paid for some dofollow links to be placed on specific aged topic based BBC news articles.
£500 a link was paid... a few days later they appeared.
They lasted about three years if I recall right before disappearing for whatever reason.
SEO was the idea behind it, authority websites etc.
Was a long time ago so could not give authoritative answer on traffic, the aim of post was to highlight that staff at orgs can be er, pliable it seems.
For the record I never dealt with someone at the BBC just a chap who said he could get links added - took a punt for a few grand and he came through.
Interestingly I have just googled the guy... and the company is more formal now but still offers 'natural' editorial links including the BBC as an example.
when you link out to another website, that tells google that the site is probably kind of important. The more links you have, especially from important high traffic domains like bbc.com, the more likely it is that your site will rank for search terms. This is how it works by default.
Because lots of the web involves users being the content creators (comment sections and whatnot), Google created a "nofollow" tag that basically nullifies the above effect.
If you go to an article on bbc.com and post a comment with a link, I'm 99% certain without checking that it will have the nofollow link attached. It'd hurt bbc's own rankings as well as make their comments section unusable if not because it'd be spammed to hell by SEO people. So what you want is for your link to appear in the article or main body of content where they wont apply the nofollow tag usually (particularly if you pay for it), and google will think your site is hot shit.
I think in light of the recent fight against hate speech and fake news, there will soon be a "silencing as a service" (SaaS). Where you can pay large amounts of money to Facebook and Google and they will go and disable accounts and ban various segments of users. Maybe you are Pepsi and get tired of Coke getting ahead selling more sugared drinks than you, and so you pay Facebook to take down accounts of anyone mentioning Coke in a positive light. Then maybe they'll sell a reactivation service, where you can pay even more money to have your account reactivated and so on.
Isn't it already possible to pay for fake reports which results in takedowns of legitimate youtube videos and similar content? I'd put good money on these services being offered today.
Big tech companies like Google and Facebook often tote the protections they have on user data, i.e. datasets are anonymized and access is tightly controlled. But does this extend to all acquired companies? Do acquired companies that may have lesser protections ever get access to the parent company's data?
I've had multiple accounts deactivated for cannabis, and seen hundreds of other weedy IGs deleted -- while businesses like the official High Times sit loftily at over 1 million followers AND verified. It doesn't surprise me that there are shady backdoor deals going on.