Facebook admits hiring PR firm to smear Google

By Amar Toor  posted May 12th 2011 7:33AM

http://www.engadget.com/2011/05/12/facebook-admits-hiring-pr-firm-to-smear-google/

It seems like the ongoing rivalry between Facebook and Google has taken a turn 
for the subversive. Last night, a spokesman for the social network confirmed to 
the Daily Beast that Facebook paid a top PR firm to spread anti-Google stories 
across the media and to encourage various outlets to examine allegations that 
the Mountain View company was violating user privacy. The PR firm, 
Burson-Marsteller, even offered to help blogger Chris Soghoian write a critical 
op-ed piece about Social Circle -- a service that allows Gmail users to access 
information on so-called "secondary connections," or friends of their friends. 
Social Circle, in fact, seems to have been at the epicenter of Facebook's smear 
campaign. In a pitch to journalists, Burson described the tool in borderline 
apocalyptic terms:

"The American people must be made aware of the now immediate intrusions into 
their deeply personal lives Google is cataloging and broadcasting every minute 
of every day-without their permission."

Soghoian thought that Burson's representatives were "making a mountain out of a 
molehill," so he decided to prod them about which company they might be working 
for. When Burson refused to spill the beans, Soghoian went public and published 
all of the e-mails sent between him and the firm. USA Today picked up on the 
story, before concluding that any claims of a smear campaign were unfounded. 
The Daily Beast's Dan Lyons, however, apparently forced Facebook's hand after 
confronting the company with "evidence" of its involvement. A Facebook 
spokesman said the social network hired Burson to do its Nixonian dirty work 
for two primary reasons: it genuinely believes that Google is violating 
consumer privacy and it also suspects that its rival "may be improperly using 
data they have scraped about Facebook users." In other words, their actions 
were motivated by both "altruistic" and self-serving agendas, though we'd be 
willing to bet that the latter slightly outweighed the former. Goog
 le, meanwhile, has yet to comment on the story, saying that it still needs 
more time to wrap its head around everything -- which might just be the most 
appropriate "no comment" we've ever heard.
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