World to End
in 2012: A Hoax Gone Too Far?
By
Robert Roy Britt,
Editorial Director
*** Spoiler alert. This
article contains information that will ruin a good hoax.
***
There's no shortage of end-of-the-world prophecies and hoaxes,
but the latest one has a slick twist. Or, some might say, a
sick twist.
In fact, just by writing about it, I'm playing into the hands
of a big media company that hopes I will write about it, or at
least pass the word and a link, so that they can ultimately
make money. Rather, I'll try to keep a few people from being
frightened.
The story starts with Mike Brown, an astronomer at Caltech who
has
found more planet-like objects in our outer solar system
than anyone.
Just like this reporter, Brown gets a lot emails from people
worried the
world will end in 2012. So many, in fact, that Brown has
come to call them "The 2012 People." He's long assumed they're
rather gullible worry warts. His view just changed a little.
The concerns often stem from bogus information about a fantasy
planet dubbed Nibiru which, the story goes, will swing into
the inner solar system, smack Earth in 2012, and
bring an end to it all. (Brown assures us there is no such
planet, and no such looming scenario known to science.)
The emails have been increasing of late. And recently one
concerned citizen went a step farther and called and left
Brown a voice mail: "I've got kids; this really scares the
hell out of me. Is there something I should be doing? Is this
real?"
The planet hunter reassured the man that it was all just a
hoax. The man was grateful.
But the man got Brown's attention.
"This guy was inherently skeptical about the 2012 claims, and
was happy when someone with a ring of authority told him there
was nothing to it, but, still
something had
made him worried enough that he had tracked down some
astronomer he had never met and called him to reassure him
about the safety of his family," Brown wrote in
his blog this week.
Then Brown found some spam among his email, an ominous missive
that purports to be from the director of the Institute for
Human Continuity. It warns: "The IHC has uncovered evidence
indicating that the disasters of 2012 are both real and
unavoidable. We believe with 94% certainty that ...
cataclysmic events will devastate our planet and many who
inhabit it. December 21, 2012 cannot be ignored."
A link in the email to the IHC's supposed web site actually
takes you to a site that is so cleverly designed, an
unsuspecting person who doesn't recognize the actors on the
page might think the IHC is real, that the end is near, and
that buying a ticket (to somewhere, on something, who knows?)
is the only hope of survival.
Truth is the web site
(it's
here, it's fake, you've been warned)
is designed by Sony Pictures. Okay, score 1 point for Sony, no
harm done, right?
Well, not so fast.
Brown, who is a pretty smart guy, admits that unlike many
doomsday websites designed by quacks, it took him a while to
figure out this web site is a fake.
"It is slick. It is professional. There is no obvious sign
anywhere that this is the work of kooks," he said.
We all hate spam. And sometimes we think its deceptiveness is
distasteful, especially when little old ladies are bilked of
billions by a faux Nigerian banker. And hoaxes sometimes go
too far. Some pranksters in New Jersey who lofted flares on
balloons in the night sky in January, as a social experiment,
were
fined
$250 by a court that determined
their UFO hoax "posed a potential fire hazard and could
have interfered with air traffic." It didn't, but their
deceptiveness, and the harm it
could have caused,
was enough for the judge.
Brown wonders if this one goes too far, scaring people who may
never learn the truth that would alleviate their fears.
"If the spam email had tried to scare me about the end of the
world and then directed me to a web site which turned out to
simply advertise the movie, that would have been distasteful,"
Brown writes. "But what is the right word for a spam email
that tries to scare me to go to a web site which then tries to
scare me even more
and doesn't even admit to being simply an ad for a movie?"
Tell me what you think...
...Sound off on
Starfleet Forum!