Welcome To The Age Of Cheap  Overseas Information
Thanks to the rise of  platforms like Facebook and Google, a growing amount 
of information being  created for Americans is coming from overseas.
 
September  28, 2017
 
_Craig Silverman_ (https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman) 
 
 
 
As ad dollars that used to fund journalism pour into  the coffers of 
Facebook and Google, the information business is experiencing a  trend familiar 
to 
other American industries: The product they produce is now  competing with 
cheaper versions coming from overseas. 
Content  farmers in the Philippines, Pakistan, Macedonia (of course), and 
beyond are  launching websites and Facebook pages aimed at Americans in 
niches such as  politics, mental health, marijuana, American muscle cars, and 
more. 
Based  on Facebook engagement and other metrics, some of these overseas 
publishers are  now beating their American counterparts. In the process they’re 
building an  industry centered on producing and exporting cheap (and 
sometimes false)  information targeted at the US. 
“This  is like all of the basic stuff happening in economics and politics 
today,” said  Tyson Barker, a political economist with the Aspen Institute 
Germany who  specializes in international economic policy. “It's a 
globalization trend and  you've seen it also in manufacturing and other 
industries.” 
Americans  and others in the English-language world are used to buying 
clothing and other  products with labels that say “Made in China” or “Made in 
Bangladesh.” Thanks to  the rise of platforms like Facebook and Google, a 
growing amount of the  information being served up in English is now coming 
from overseas, albeit  without the same kind of labeling.
 

 
  



Facebook

 
One  surprising area where the impact of this trend is being felt is with 
Native  American news and content. 
A  few weeks ago, _Indian  Country Today Media Network_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/IndianCountryTodayMediaNetwork/?hc_ref=ARRLLR3BYubuPRjXA5uL1WbrOep-2Ah
fVNfzTVC32nR3lbPpaDoyYIiygbKZZP_c6kM&fref=nf) , an online and print 
publisher for Native  Americans, announced that it was suspending operations 
due to 
the lack of a  sustainable business model. 
“ICTMN  has faced the same challenges that other media outlets have faced,”
 said _a  letter_ 
(https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/native-news/indian-country-today-media-network-cease-active-operations/)
  from publisher 
Ray  Halbritter. “It is no secret that with the rise of the Internet, 
traditional  publishing outlets have faced unprecedented adversity.” 
But  while ICTMN had to stop operations, a raft of overseas-based 
publishers of  content about Native Americans continue to forge ahead and 
experience 
growth and  revenue primarily thanks to Facebook. 
TheNativePeople.net,  which _has_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/thenativepeoplee/)  _two_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/NativeAmericansNA/)  associated 
Facebook pages with close to  half a million fans between them, is run by a man 
in 
Kosovo. The website  TheIndigenousAmericans.com also pumps out Native 
American news for visitors  coming from its _Indigenous People Of  America_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/IndigenousPeopleOfAmericas/)  Facebook page, which  
is 
approaching 1 million fans, almost twice the number of ICTMN’s. The page has  
experienced steady growth: It added roughly 200,000 new fans since BuzzFeed 
 News _first  wrote about it in a December_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/facebook-scammers-profiting-from-standing-rock?utm_term=.ujoWyWMX3o
#.sujA4A5KoR)  story that identified a slew of Native  American publishers 
based in Kosovo and Vietnam. 
A  Vietnamese publisher runs WelcomeNative.com and YesWeNative.com, two 
sites  promoted by the Yes We Native Magazine _Facebook page_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/welcomenative/) , which has more  than 350,000 fans. 
The page says 
its owner is based in San Francisco, but domain  ownership records list the 
owner as a person named Minh Nhat Tran of Hanoi.  Domain owners can list 
whatever name and location they want in registration  records; however, the 
email address used for both domains has also been listed  as the contact for 
job postings in Vietnam for _graphic  designers and Facebook page managers_ 
(https://1viec.com/tim-viec-nhanh/cu-bach-tung-id240963.html) , further 
showing a link to Vietnam. The  same person also runs an American news site 
called 
USANewToday.com. 
Some  of the Native American pages and websites earn money from advertising 
on  articles. Many also operate online stores where they sell T-shirts with 
Native  American designs, as well as clothing, mugs, and other items. As 
_reported  by BuzzFeed News_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/facebook-scammers-profiting-from-standing-rock?utm_term=.siVpkpMdmw#.ciGgagVYpX)
 , 
these designs are often stolen from actual Native American  artists. 
“These  pages are taking our work and paying for the sponsored posts on 
Facebook and  making tons of money off of us,” said Aaron Silva, the Native 
American cofounder  of_The NTVS_ (http://www.thentvs.com/shop/) , a clothing 
brand in  Minnesota. 
BuzzFeed  News has identified other online publishers in countries 
including Macedonia,  Pakistan, Georgia, Croatia, India, and the Philippines 
that 
produce information  aimed primarily at US audiences. 
“It's  clear that those foreign publishers have developed avenues and 
methods to get  their content into the American traffic flow,” said Sarah 
Thompson, an Indiana  woman who operates the _Exploiting the  Niche_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/ExploitingTheNiche/)  Facebook page. 
When  not homeschooling her children, she hunts down scammers and clickbait 
artists  who target niche information topics. Many of them turn out to be 
based overseas,  she told BuzzFeed News. When asked to name some of the 
topics where this is the  case, she rattled off a list. 
“The  US military and veterans are popular themes as well as police and 
police dogs.  Anything with animals, animal abuse, wild animals, beautiful 
nature, flowers,  Native Americans, Christianity,” she said. “Really, it could 
be anything. Any  subject I have looked into I have found the corrupt 
pockets where that community  is being exploited.” 
Jason  Kint, the CEO of _Digital Content Next_ 
(https://digitalcontentnext.org/) , an alliance of  large digital publishers, 
told BuzzFeed News the 
current economics of online  content often favor people who excel at gaming 
platforms, rather than media  brands doing reporting and original content 
creation. 
“If  proper trust frameworks aren't in place to ensure consumer and 
advertiser trust,  then the automation/farming of the content will move to the 
lowest cost, ethics,  laws available,” he said. 
Native  American publishers aren’t the only ones competing with — and 
sometimes losing  out to — overseas publishers in a niche aimed at people in 
the 
US. As _previously  reported by BuzzFeed News_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/how-macedonia-became-a-global-hub-for-pro-trump-misinfo)
 , the 
town of Veles, Macedonia, is home to dozens  of websites targeting American 
conservatives which often publish fake news. A  recent BuzzFeed News 
_analysis  of partisan political news websites and Facebook pages_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/inside-the-partisan-fight-for-your-news-feed?utm_ter
m=.ytxQwQ8BLq#.vdEE7EKyLl) revealed that a page  run by a 20-year-old in 
Macedonia outperforms many of the biggest conservative  news Facebook pages 
run by Americans. BuzzFeed News has also found publishers  in _Kosovo_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/fake-news-turf-war?utm_term=.pbEq2q0Q9e#.bu
7GvGklaE)  and _Georgia_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/anti-muslim-traffic-arbitrage-is-a-thing?utm_term=.vvagPgj95W#.ysk3Z3bmPM)
  that 
publish (often fake) news crafted  for American conservatives.
 

 
  



Facebook

 
Health  is another niche attracting overseas publishers. According to 
domain ownership  records from DomainTools, a man in Pakistan named “Kashif 
Shahzad” owns over 200  domain names, several of which focus on mental health 
and 
related topics,  including MedicalHealthRecords.us, HealthTimes.info, and 
GeneralHealthcare.co.  Another of his sites, GreatAmericans.world, focuses on 
fibromyalgia and is  heavily promoted from a Facebook page called _US 
Health Care_ (https://www.facebook.com/ushealthcares/) . He also owns  
DailyMedicalNews.co, which is promoted by a Facebook page called _Depression  
Awareness_ (https://www.facebook.com/dereksommerville39/)  with close to half a 
 
million fans. BuzzFeed News contacted him at the email address listed in his  
domain registrations but did not receive a reply.
One  way the (often plagiarized) content from this network of sites spreads 
is to  have fake Facebook accounts share it in Facebook groups about health 
topics.  Thompson pointed BuzzFeed News to several accounts that were part 
of a group of  interconnected profiles that consistently share articles from 
the same health  sites into Facebook groups. Some of the accounts are also 
administrators of  these groups, which focus on mental health, fibromyalgia, 
addiction, and medical  marijuana, among other topics. Along with the fake 
accounts, some groups, such  as _this one about  marijuana_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/groups/659034594153588/admins/) , have administrators 
based in 
Pakistan. 
One  suspicious account with the name _Rabia  Anwar_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/Rabiaanwar.1219?lst=100000675881347:100006840676240:1506454880)
  is a 
member of seven  Facebook groups about marijuana and five dedicated to 
fibromyalgia. The  account’s profile features a photo of a woman, but earlier 
photos posted on its  timeline clearly show it originally belonged to a man. 
(The 
account info is also  set to male.) The profile also prominently presents 
the _photo of a Pakistani actress and  her family_ 
(https://www.instagram.com/p/BH1m5FkD7_F/)  as if it depicts  the person behind 
the account. 
Since  August, the account’s _public posting  activity_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/search/100006840676240/stories-by)  consists entirely 
of  sharing new 
articles from the network of health sites run from Pakistan into  Facebook 
groups.
 

 
  



Facebook

 
Thompson  was most alarmed when she identified what she believes are fake 
Facebook  accounts that are active in Facebook groups and present themselves 
as recovering  drug addicts. These accounts repeatedly share content from 
overseas  publishers. 
“The  thought of these spamming bots infiltrating a support group of 
recovering  addicts made me so mad,” she said. “Some clickbaiter thousands of 
miles away is  violating the trust and privacy these communities afford to each 
other for mere  pennies per click.” 
Along  with the violation of trust, Thompson is concerned that many 
overseas publishers  in the health vertical simply copy and paste whatever 
information will grab  attention, which can often be false claims about new 
cures, 
or misleading health  warnings. 
“They  could be giving them bad information, distracting them from proven 
treatments  with snake oil spam, eroding their trust in their doctor, or even 
giving them  bad information that could harm them,” she said. “It's not a 
joke, it’s not  harmless. The heroin epidemic in the Midwest where I live is 
really bad. Lots of  people are dying.” 
Health  is also a focus for Macedonian publishers. _Wired  magazine_ 
(https://www.wired.com/2017/02/veles-macedonia-fake-news/)  reported on  
Aleksandar and Borce Velkovski, two brothers who got rich from  
HealthyFoodHouse.com, 
a website filled with health tips and recipes. BuzzFeed  News also found 
dozens of health-focused domain names registered to people in  Macedonia. 
That  country is in fact home to a cottage industry of websites focused on 
_motorcycles,  American muscle cars, horses_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/how-macedonian-spammers-are-using-facebook-groups-to-feed-yo)
 , 
and other topics. 
The  glut of English-language publishers in Macedonia is partly thanks to a 
man named  Mirko Ceselkoski. More than a decade ago, he figured out how to 
make money by  running websites about cars and other niche topics aimed at 
Americans. When he  met with BuzzFeed News in July in Skopje, Ceselkoski 
provided a business card  that described him as “The Man Who Helped Donald 
Trump 
Win US Elections (me and  my students from Veles).” 
Ceselkoski  claims credit for Trump’s win because many of the young 
publishers in Veles took  a course he offers on how to make money with 
English-language websites.  Ceselkoski charged $425, which is roughly 
equivalent to the 
average monthly  salary in the country. 
“I  was instructing my students that they should write news aimed at 
American  people,” Ceselkoski said. 
He  denies telling students to publish fake news, but does instruct them to 
copy a  few paragraphs from a story that’s performing well on Facebook and 
create a new  story from that. It's the content equivalent of an overseas 
factory pumping out  knockoffs of the latest fashion trend.
 

 
  



ICTMN  / The Indigenous American

 
Plagiarism  is a standard tactic of low-quality overseas publishers. All of 
the content  BuzzFeed News reviewed on the health sites run from Pakistan 
was stolen from  other websites. (There was even _one story_ 
(http://archive.is/ZhCqG)  about antidepressants _stolen  from BuzzFeed_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/annaborges/no-zombies-here?utm_term=.eankdkWZpL#.bob3m3MyOj)
 .)
The  same is true for players in the Native American niche.  
TheIndigenousAmericans.com recently _featured_ (http://archive.is/bcU9h)  a Q&A 
with actor 
Adam Beach. That  interview was _stolen  word-for-word_ 
(https://indiancountrymedianetwork.com/news/actor-adam-beach-on-stardom-passion-and-the-award-cl
osest-to-his-heart/)  from Indian  Country Today Media Network. 
The  same plagiarism frequently occurs in the world of fake political news, 
too. _As  previously detailed by BuzzFeed News_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/fake-news-turf-war?utm_term=.akwl0lpOQa#.cqJG3G1jKm)
 , 
multiple publishers in Macedonia,  Kosovo, Bulgaria, and Georgia plagiarize the 
fake articles published on a group  of websites run by a man in Maine. The man, 
Christopher Blair, calls himself a  liberal troll and claims he publishes 
the fake stories — such as “BREAKING:  Hillary Clinton Personally Funded 
Antifa Terrorists With $7.1 Million Bankroll”  — to expose the ignorance of 
American conservatives. After months of having his  content stolen, he 
_managed  to get some of their websites and Facebook pages shut down_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/macedonian-publishers-are-panicking-after-faceboo
k-killed?utm_term=.phGLpLyqrE#.onrVmVvLbM) . 
“They  will copy, paste, and post as many times in a day as they can. They 
steal  content from pages with a lot of shares,” he _said_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/fake-news-turf-war?utm_term=.akwl0lpOQa#.cqJG3G1jKm)
 
. 
Sometimes  overseas publishers mix their topics to puzzling effect. A 
website called_USMedicalCouncil.com_ (http://usmedicalcouncil.com/)  shows new 
visitors a pop-up message to  like the _Fibro & Chronic Pain  Center_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/fibropaincenter/)  Facebook page. That  page 
constantly 
posts articles connected to health spammers in Pakistan.  However, 
USMedicalCouncil.com recently switched topics and now posts  hyperpartisan 
political 
stories. One of its most recent is a_completely false story_ 
(http://archive.is/eNh5T)  alleging incest in the Trump  family.
 

 
  



Facebook

 
TheNativePeople.net,  which is run from Kosovo, is just as likely to 
publish _a list of "home remedies"_ (http://archive.is/aaLPf)  to help with 
clogged arteries, which  itself is an article _copied from a health_ 
(http://archive.is/K675v)  site run by a Macedonian, according  to _domain  
registration 
records_ (https://whois.domaintools.com/healthiestalternative.com) .
But  not all overseas publishers working in English operate at the lowest 
end of the  value chain. _Bored Panda_ (https://www.boredpanda.com/)  
publishes viral content about art,  design, and other topics. It frequently 
works 
with the original artists to  create stories. The company was founded in 
Lithuania, and that’s where the  majority of its staff is based. Owner Tomas 
Banisauskas did not respond to  interview requests from BuzzFeed News, but he 
did publish _a  post_ 
(https://medium.com/@tomasb/bored-panda-how-we-built-a-global-media-business-with-5-month-58bba06d161b)
  on Medium titled “How we  
built a global media business with $5/month.” The $5 in question is the cost 
of  his initial web hosting bill. 
“I  was laser-focused on profits from day one,” wrote Banisauskas, who 
studied  business at Vilnius University. “The idea was to create content that 
people  would share on social networks, which would bring free traffic back 
to my  website. All this traffic then could be monetised with AdSense banners.
” 
He  said Bored Panda succeeded by focusing on publishing a smaller number 
of quality  posts, rather than churning out a large number each day. This, 
and what he said  was a decision to avoid using clickbait headlines, helped 
his site avoid a _crash  in traffic_ 
(http://www.adweek.com/digital/facebook-killed-viral-star-upworthys-traffic-plummets-news-feed-tweaks/)
  that hit 
viral  sites such as Upworthy when Facebook changed its algorithm, according to 
 Banisauskas.
 



 
There  are also some American and British companies taking advantage of the 
overseas  information explosion by using relatively cheap labor in the 
Philippines or  India to create content for their websites. BuzzFeed News 
_recently  revealed_ (https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsi
lverman/how-a-global-media-company-uses-overseas-labour-and-a-ghost)  that the 
content for  
International Business Times Australia is actually produced by writers in the  
Philippines. Its parent company, Newsweek Media Group, which publishes the  
magazine 
of the same name, also employs writers in India to create content for  its 
global IBT editions. One overseas writer for an IBT website told BuzzFeed  
News they are required to write five articles per day. 
There  are also companies, like _Tune Media_ 
(http://tunemedia.biz/our-brands/) , that are based in the  Philippines and use 
local writers there to 
produce content for a range of  English-language sites about topics such as 
gaming and news. 
The  rise of overseas publishers is the result of basic internet economics. 
The most  valuable audience for digital ads is English-language website 
visitors from  countries such as the United States. 
“Because  American traffic pays better, American themes are commonly 
exploited,” Thompson  said. 
The  growth of overseas publishers also reflects another, connected 
economic trend:  Rates for digital display ads have been falling for years, 
which 
means a  publisher earns less money per ad view. Part of the reason for 
falling digital  ad rates is the massive amount of online content being 
produced, 
which results  in an abundance of inventory for advertisers to choose from. 
This makes it more  difficult for US publishers to earn sustainable revenue 
from digital  advertising, as evidenced by the experience of _Indian  
Country Today Media Network_ 
(https://www.facebook.com/IndianCountryTodayMediaNetwork/?hc_ref=ARRLLR3BYubuPRjXA5uL1WbrOep-2AhfVNfzTVC32nR3lbPpaDoyYIiygbKZZP_c
6kM&fref=nf)  and many others. 
In  response to declining display ad rates for text content, some 
publishers have  been laying off writers in favor of producing video content, 
which 
attracts  higher advertising rates. But the so-called pivot to video has yet 
to pay off  for some publishers, and is causing them to lose _traffic_ 
(https://digiday.com/media/side-effect-pivot-video-audience-shrinkage/) . 
The  reality is that the same factors that create challenges for US 
publishers are an  opportunity for people in countries with a much lower cost 
of 
living. A single  viral article that generates ad revenue in dollars or euros 
can provide several  months of living expenses for a family in Macedonia or 
Pakistan. It will barely  cover a person’s rent for one month in New York. 
This  is the result of a world where big platforms like Google and Facebook 
decide  which content rises to the top and where anyone with an internet 
connection —  and an understanding of platform dominance — can compete. 
Kint,  who represents big publishers such as Vox Media, the New York Times, 
and WedMD  (BuzzFeed is not a member), says anyone should be able to 
publish  English-language content regardless of where they’re based. The issue 
is 
that  platforms often don’t distinguish between a story from a 
well-established site  and a copycat version stolen by another property in the 
same 
niche, according to  Kint.
 
“The  revenue seems to be ignorant of quality thanks to Facebook,” Kint 
said. 
“It's  the result of a move to an automated world in which platforms are 
able to  distribute, mine, and monetize content according to their own dials. 
On one side  is profit and the other side is societal good,” Kint said. “
Unfortunately, these  two goals don't always align.” 
This  is why Facebook and Google are increasingly in the crosshairs of 
established  publishers. 
“Media  companies fear it destroyed their business and turned the news 
industry into  peasant serfs on the greedy overlord's land,” wrote Axios’s Mike 
Allen_in a  story_ 
(https://www.axios.com/what-facebook-is-thinking-2486345185.html)  about 
Facebook’s  struggles in the wake of its revelations that 
Russians had bought targeted  political ads on the platform. 
At  a recent event, NBCUniversal CEO Steve Burke _criticized_ 
(https://www.wsj.com/articles/cmo-today-hulus-big-night-at-the-emmys-rolling-stone-up-for-
sale-facebook-russian-ads-probe-1505736093)  Facebook for the way it 
handles  “professional content,” compared to Snapchat. 
"Snap  treats professional content with respect, unlike Facebook, just to 
give a real  pointed example,” he said. “We are making real money on Snap.” 
Facebook  is aware of the criticism. After taking heat for _allowing  fake 
news and other forms of misinformation to go viral on its platform_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/viral-fake-election-news-outperformed-real-n
ews-on-facebook)  during the election, it spent the past  10 months rolling 
out new initiatives to reduce the spread of misinformation and  disrupt the 
ability of spammers and other bad actors to earn money from its  platform. 
It’s _spending  millions of dollars on sponsorships and other initiatives_ 
(https://www.buzzfeed.com/craigsilverman/facebook-charm-offensive?utm_term=.ct
gAGAl7vj#.naPmXmQyMb)  in the news industry. The company also  recently 
_revealed_ 
(https://media.fb.com/2017/06/08/expanding-monetization-opportunities-on-instant-articles/)
  that publishers using its fast-loading  Instant 
Articles are earning roughly $1 million per day in revenue. Google and  
Facebook now say they are both working on ways to help news publishers earn  
money 
from subscriptions via their platforms. 
“If  journalism isn’t surviving in this environment, that’s bad for 
society, but it’s  also bad for Facebook,” Fidji Simo, Facebook’s vice 
president 
of product, _told  Bloomberg in June_ 
(https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-06-19/media-companies-are-getting-sick-of-facebook)
 . 
But  while many American publishers decry the reality of a platform world, 
it’s  enabling some people overseas to move up in the digital economy. 
For  years, people in the Philippines and other developing countries 
performed menial  tasks for Facebook, such as _reviewing content to  see if it 
violates the social network's terms of service_ 
(https://www.wired.com/2014/10/content-moderation/) . They have also  toiled in 
the gray and black markets 
created by platforms. Some create and sell  fake social media accounts, 
while others offer services to spam Facebook groups  with links to try to 
generate traffic. BuzzFeed News recently spent $10 to  purchase 100 fake 
Twitter 
accounts from a man in Indonesia. 
Wired _reported_ (https://www.wired.com/2017/02/veles-macedonia-fake-news/) 
 that one Macedonian man was “one of the  many peons around the world 
laboring online for MicroWorkers.com, earning  something like a tenth of a cent 
for liking a YouTube video or leaving a  comment.” 
But  then he learned to run his own websites, which drastically improved 
his economic  situation — albeit at the cost of American political discourse. 
Barker  of the Aspen Institute said this is possible because platforms have 
effectively  erased barriers to entry for information distribution. 
“You're  putting everybody at the same level in the sense that, _as  has 
been reported_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/exclusive-russia-used-facebook-events-to-organize-anti-immigrant-rallies-on-us-soil)
 , if you're in Russia 
you can help to organize an event in  a state like Wyoming to protest against 
the removal of [confederate] statues or  whatever,” he said. 
The  most visible representation of this leveling is that websites look the 
same in  the News Feed or in Google search results, regardless of whether 
you’re a Native  American writer who interviewed an actor or a man in Kosovo 
who stole the  original writer's words. 
“It's  value neutral,” Barker said of the platforms and their treatment of 
information.  “It gives a lot of power to capital and very little power to 
labor. All the  power is in the hands of capital — and capital is the  
platforms.”

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to