Search posterous

Search all posts and users. Type a name, type a favorite song title, whatever! See what comes up.
  

More posterous blogs











More recommended blogs »

Here are posterous posts filed under manipulation...

BTE says...

Tips for Writing Your Blog

Whether you are blogging for business applications, or for personal growth, the process of writing daily is a rewarding activity in many ways. The individual writer is able to benefit from the satisfaction that is gained from personal reflection. Blogs afford the writer the means to distribute information and ideas...


blog-> posts-> postings-> information-> post-> writing


Filed under: manipulation

Terrillific says...

It's a fascinating examination of why human beings are wired and conditioned to react irrationally. We human beings are a selfish
bunch, so it's all the more surprising to see how easily we can be manipulated to behave in ways that run counter to our own
self-interest.

This isn't just a "gee-whiz" observation; understanding how and why we behave irrationally is important. If you don't understand how these
irrational behaviors are triggered, the marketing weasels will use them against you.

In fact, it's already happening. Witness 10 Irrational Human Behaviors and How to Leverage Them to Improve Web Marketing. Don't say I didn't
warn you.

Let's take a look at the various excerpts presented in that article, and consider how we can avoid falling into the rut of predictably irrational behavior -- and defend ourselves from those vicious marketing weasels.

1. Encourage false comparisons
When Williams-Sonoma introduced bread machines, sales were slow. When they added a "deluxe" version that was 50% more expensive, they
started flying off the shelves; the first bread machine now appeared to be a bargain

When contemplating the purchase of a $25 pen, the majority of subjects would drive to another store 15 minutes away to save $7. When
contemplating the purchase of a $455 suit, the majority of subjects would not drive to another store 15 minutes away to save $7. The amount saved and time involved are the same, but people make very different choices. Watch out for relative thinking; it comes naturally to all of us.

Realize that some premium options exist as decoys -- that is, they are there only to make the less expensive options look more appealing, because they're easy to compare. Don't make binding decisions solely based on how easy it is to compare two side-by-side options from the same vendor. Try comparing all the alternatives, even those from other vendors.

Don't be swayed by relative percentages for small dollar amounts. Yes, you saved 25%, but how much effort and time did you expend on that seven bucks?

2. Reinforce Anchoring
Savador Assael, the Pearl King, single-handedly created the market for black pearls, which were unknown in the industry before 1973. His first attempt to market the pearls was an utter failure; he didn't sell a single pearl. So he went to his friend, Harry Winston, and had Winston put them in the window of his 5th Avenue store with an outrageous price tag attached. Then he ran full page ads in glossy magazines with black pearls next to diamonds, rubies, and emeralds. Soon, black pearls were considered precious.

Simonsohn and Loewenstein found that people who move to a new city remain anchored to the prices they paid in their previous city. People
who move from Lubbock to Pittsburgh squeeze their families into smaller houses to pay the same amount. People who move from LA to Pittsburgh don't save money, they just move into mansions.

Scale your purchases to your needs, not your circumstances or wallet size. What do you actually use? How much do you use it, and how
frequently?

Try to objectively measure the value of what you're buying; don't be tricked into measuring relative to similar products or competitors. How much does buying this save you or your company? How much benefit will you get out of it? Attempt to measure that benefit by putting a concrete dollar amount on it.

3. It's "Free"!
Ariely, Shampanier, and Mazar conducted an experiment using Lindt truffles and Hershey's Kisses. When a truffle was $0.15 and a kiss was $0.01, 73% of subjects chose the truffle and 27% the Kiss. But when a truffle was $0.14 and a kiss was free, 69% chose the kiss and 31% the truffle.

According to standard economic theory, the price reduction shouldn't have lead to any behavior change, but it did.

Ariely's theory is that for normal transactions, we consider both upside and downside. But when something is free, we forget about the downside. "Free" makes us perceive what is being offered as immensely more valuable than it really is. Humans are loss-averse; when considering a normal purchase, loss-aversion comes into play. But when an item is free, there is no visible possibility of loss

You will tend to overestimate the value of items you get for free. Resist this by viewing free stuff skeptically rather than welcoming it with open arms. If it was really that great, why would it be free?

Free stuff often comes with well hidden and subtle strings attached. How will using a free service or obtaining a free item influence your future choices? What paid alternatives are you avoiding by choosing the free route, and why?

How much effort will the free option cost you? Are there non-free options which would cost less in time or effort? How much is your time worth?

When you use a free service or product, you are implicitly endorsing and encouraging the provider, effectively beating a path to their door. Is this something you are comfortable with?

4. Exploit social norms
The AARP asked lawyers to participate in a program where they would offer their services to needy employees for a discounted price of $30/hour. No dice. When the program manager instead asked if they'd offer their services for free, the lawyers overwhelmingly said they would participate

Companies may appeal to your innate sense of community or public good to convince you to do their work at zero pay. Consider carefully before choosing to participate; what do you get out of contributing your time and effort? Is this truly a worthy cause? Would this be worth doing if it was a paid gig?

When it comes to the web, make sure you aren't being turned into a digital sharecropper.

5. Design for Procrastination
Ariely conducted an experiment on his class. Students were required to write three papers. Ariely asked the first group to commit to dates by
which they would turn in each paper. Late papers would be penalized 1% per day. There was no penalty for turning papers in early. The logical
response is to commit to turning all three papers in on the last day of class. The second group was given no deadlines; all three papers were due in the last day of class. The third group was directed to turn their papers in on the 4th, 8th, and 12th weeks. The results? Group 3 (imposed deadlines) got the best grades. Group 2 (no deadlines) got the worst grades, and Group 1 (self-selected deadlines) finished in the middle. Allowing students to pre-commit to deadlines improved performance. Students who spaced out their commitments did well; students who did the logical thing and gave no commitments did badly.

Steer clear of offers of low-rate trial periods which auto-convert into automatic recurring monthly billing. They know that most people will procrastinate and forget to cancel before the recurring billing kicks in.

Either favor fixed-rate, fixed-term plans -- or become meticulous about cancelling recurring services when you're not using them.

6. Utilize the Endowment Effect
Ariely and Carmon conducted an experiment on Duke students, who sleep out for weeks to get basketball tickets; even those who sleep out are
still subjected to a lottery at the end. Some students get tickets, some don't. The students who didn't get tickets told Ariely that they'd be willing to pay up to $170 for tickets. The students who did get the tickets told Ariely that they wouldn't accept less than $2,400
for their tickets.

There are three fundamental quirks of human nature. We fall in love with what we already have. We focus on what we might lose, rather than
what we might gain. We assume that other people will see the transaction from the same perspective as we do.

The value of what you've spent so far on a service, product, or relationship -- in effort or money -- is probably far less than you
think. Be willing to walk away.

Once you've bought something, never rely on your internal judgment to assess its value, because you're too close to it now. Ask other people
what they'd pay for this service, product, or relationship. Objectively research what others pay online.

7. Capitalize on our Aversion to Loss
Ariely and Shin conducted an experiment on MIT students. They devised a computer game which offered players three doors: Red, Blue, and
Green. You started with 100 clicks. You clicked to enter a room. Once in a room, each click netted you between 1-10 cents. You could also
switch rooms (at the cost of a click). The rooms were programmed to provide different levels of rewards (there was variation within each room's payoffs, but it was pretty easy to tell which one provided the best payout).

Players tended to try all three rooms, figure out which one had the highest payout, and then spend all their time there. (These are MIT students we're talking about). Then, however, Ariely introduced a new wrinkle: Any door left unvisited for 12 clicks would disappear forever. With each click, the unclicked doors shrank by 1/12th.

Now, players jumped from door to door, trying to keep their options open.They made 15% less money; in fact, by choosing any of the doors
and sticking with it, they could have made more money.

Ariely increased the cost of opening a door to 3 cents; no change--players still seemed compelled to keeping their options open. Ariely told participants the exact monetary payoff of each door; no change. Ariely allowed participants as many practice runs as they wanted before the actual experiment; no change. Ariely changed the rules so that any door could be "reincarnated" with a single click; no change.

Players just couldn't tolerate the idea of the loss, and so they did whatever was necessary to prevent their doors from closing, even though disappearance had no real consequences and could be easily reversed. We feel compelled to preserve options, even at great expense, even when it doesn't make sense.

If your choices are artificially narrowed, don't passively get funneled towards the goal they're herding you toward. Demand choice,
even if it means switching vendors or allegiances. Don't pay extra for options, unless you can point to hard evidence that you need those options. Some options exist just to make you doubt yourself, so you'll worry about not having them.

8. Engender Unreasonable Expectations
Ariely, Lee, and Frederick conducted yet another experiment on MIT students. They let students taste two different beers, and then choose
to get a free pint of one of the brews. Brew A was Budweiser. Brew B was Budweiser, plus 2 drops of balsamic vinegar per ounce.

When students were not told about the nature of the beers, they overwhelmingly chose the balsamic beer. When students were told about the true nature of the beers, they overwhelmingly chose the Budweiser. If you tell people up front that something might be distasteful, the odds are good they'll end up agreeing with you--because of their expectations.

Whatever you've heard about a brand, company, or product -- there's no substitute for your own hands-on experience. Let your own opinions guide you, not the opinions of others. Just because something is labelled "premium" or "pro" or "award-winning" doesn't mean it is. Research these claims; don't let marketing set your expectations. Rely on evidence and facts.

9. Leverage Pricing Bias
Ariely, Waber, Shiv, and Carmon made up a fake painkiller, Veladone-Rx. An attractive woman in a business suit (with a faint Russian accent) told subjects that 92% of patients receiving VR reported significant pain relief in 10 minutes, with relief lasting up to 8 hours.

When told that the drug cost $2.50 per dose, nearly all of the subjects reported pain relief. When told that the drug cost $0.10 per dose, only half of the subjects reported pain relief. The more pain a person experienced, the more pronounced the effect. A similar study at U Iowa showed that students who paid list price for cold medications reported better medical outcomes than those who bought discount (but clinically identical) drugs.

Price often has nothing to do with value. Expensive is not synonymous with quality. Investigate whether the price is justified; never accept it at face value.

Don't fall prey to the "moneymoon"; just because you paid for something doesn't mean it's automatically worthwhile. Not everything we pay money for works well, or was even worth what we spent for it. We all make mistakes when buying things, but we don't want to admit it.

What I learned from Predictably Irrational is that everyone is irrational sometimes, and that's OK. We're not perfectly logical Vulcans, after all. The trick is training yourself to know when you're most likely to make irrational choices, and to resist those impulses.

If you aren't at least aware of our sad, irrational human condition, well ... that's exactly where the marketing weasels want you.

(via http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001301.html) by by Jeff Atwood

Filed under: manipulation

Finne says...

Filed under: manipulation

cscyphers says...

Under the guise of suggesting to readers how to maximize meetings and build consensus, Dan McCarthy tells us how to manipulate the group into getting the consensus you want:

  1. Frame the decision: Agree on what is being decided.
  2. Generate alternatives: This is the time to brainstorm.
  3. Clarify alternatives: Take some time to allow questions for clarification.
  4. Narrow down the choices: Add up the total number of ideas and divide by 3.
  5. Keep and discard: Start with the alternative with the most votes and ask: “It looks like this one got the most votes – how about if this one stays for now?”
  6. Summarize the decision(s), and decide on who’s going to do what by when: Usually when a group reaches a true consensus decision, the energy and commitment is so high people are clamoring to sign up for action items.

Let's go back through the list and talk about opportunities to manipulate:

  1. Frame the decision: If I can frame the argument, I can decide the argument. I recall a class in the Economics of Justice from undergrad; the professor insisted on defining justice as "when everyone has as much as they need". Perhaps, but that frames the debate in such a way as to focused on equality of outcome, not equality of opportunity.

    It also presupposes you can build consensus to agree on what to decide. Otherwise, this becomes a recursive, Dilbertesque type of fire drill.

  2. Narrow down the choices: I can influence here by choosing how many "votes" each person gets. Divide by 3? Well, divide by 2 if I want to dilute everyone's vote, or divide by 10 if I want the oppposite.

And that's just off the top of my head.

Filed under: manipulation

hypos says...

Les valeurs, ça plait, ça fait vendre, ça flatte l'électeur franchouillard, ça rassure la grand-mère.

Voyant que le score de la majorité présidentielle s'effrite dans de récents sondages, Sarkozy se met en quête de nouveaux axes de communication.

C'est ce que nous apprend le quotidien La Croix dans son édition du jour.

Extraits :

Le chef de l’État se cherche de nouveaux relais afin de retrouver les faveurs de l’électorat populaire, tout en donnant un tour de vis à sa communication

À mi-mandat, et peut-être pour la première fois, Nicolas Sarkozy semble atteint par le doute. Depuis la rentrée, les controverses s’enchaînent, les élus de la majorité n’hésitent pas à afficher haut et fort leurs désaccords, le débat sur l’identité nationale est violemment critiqué par l’opposition et fait sourire les observateurs étrangers. Le président a perdu ce qui faisait sa spécificité : la maîtrise de l’agenda. Ce n’est plus lui qui impose le tempo et les termes du débat ; il subit. Quant aux mauvais sondages, ils se suivent et se ressemblent.

Lui qui aimait laisser penser qu’il devait tout faire seul, comprend aussi qu’il a besoin de relais. Depuis quelques semaines, son agenda compte de plus en plus de rendez-vous avec des élus de terrain

Parallèlement, Nicolas Sarkozy a donné un tour de vis à sa communication. Le chef de l’État n’a pas supporté d’être à plusieurs occasions la risée du Net, ces derniers mois

« À une crise de valeurs, tu dois répondre par une offensive sur les valeurs », a conseillé le conseiller Patrick Buisson au chef de l’État.

Les stratèges du président ont ainsi décidé d’ouvrir une « séquence » consacrée à l’ordre et à l’identité nationale. Et de la faire durer jusqu’aux élections régionales. Un moyen de se repositionner par rapport à ses propres électeurs. Tout en tentant d’attirer à lui les voix de l’extrême droite.

 

Mais les moulinets de l'Elysée sur l'Identité nationale ont de fortes chances de se terminer en flop.  En effet, les Français se révèlent sereins sur leur identité.

Et pourtant, comme il apparait sur cette vidéo trouvée chez fdesouche, les ministres ont bien appris leur leçon !

 

 

 

 

Filed under: Manipulation

BTE says...

Tips for Writing Your Blog

Whether you are blogging for business applications, or for personal growth, the process of writing daily is a rewarding activity in many ways. The individual writer is able to benefit from the satisfaction that is gained from personal reflection. Blogs afford the writer the means to distribute information and ideas...


postings-> blog-> important-> keep-> writing-> interest

"postings" "blog" "important" "keep" "writing" "interest"


  • daisies Quick and Dirty Tips for Effective Corporate Blogging, pt 2 This is part two in a series about tips for good corporate blogging. We touched on three tips in the first part of this series - Now here are another handful of tips for your consideration. - 4 - Keep each piece of content short, simple and concise to get...
  • Top Blogging Strategies Top Blogging Strategies Whether your blog is about general interest topics like how you washed a crayon in your son's pocket and there's a new bank going up in town, or you have a niche blog designed to make money, the same basic blogging strategies apply if you want to be a top...
  • Blogroll Spotlight: Iwillteachyoutoberich.com I've linked to a few of Ramit's posts before and he's on my blogroll, but the other day it hit me: his blog is really good. It came out of nowhere and it made me take a closer look to see what it is about his blog that makes me...
  • lappy Get Free Blog Traffic by Writing Smart Why should you have to pay for obtaining traffic to your blog? There is no reason why you should spend a lot of money making your blog friendly for readers, considering that some of the best ways to get blog traffic are free. Attracting free blog traffic can easily net...
  • Write Content for Traffic Writing content and updating your website with content can help get constant traffic to your website.
  • postoften Increase Traffic To Your Blog, pt3 Here is Part 3 in our series on increasing traffic to your blog. We hope you enjoyed the series, and that you can take these tips and use them to increase your readership beginning today. 13 - Post Often - Now you should be posting as often as you possibly...
  • shortandsweet What is the Difference Between Blogging and Content Writing? Sometimes it seems like articles and blogs are so similar to one another in content that it can be difficult to tell what the difference is between these two types of written media. Blogs tend to have more leeway, and follow a completely different structure because they can be short...
  • rose What's in a Name? There are three different primary considerations to make when it comes to naming your corporate blog. You cannot simply choose a name that you prefer, if it is not relevant to your business or attractive to your prospective readers. Likewise, you cannot choose a name for your corporate blog that...
  • Professional Blogging Roundup: On RSS Feeds, PR, Writing Tips, and More Happy belated Thanksgiving. Did everyone enjoy their four day weekend? I know I did. The turkey was great. Here we are again with another edition of the roundup; lots of interesting things to read and think about! Corporate For some thoughts On Blogging, College Mogul, Drupal, and Acquia check out...
  • competition 5 Musts You Should Be Doing When You're Not Blogging Unless you are writing hundreds of posts a day, the amount of time you spend posting on your corporate blog should be minimal. In fact, that is why so many decide to start their own blogs, since everything can be automated and you can sit back and relax. However, there...
Blog search tools by BlogSearchQuery.com
5 Online Store Search Results

    • Blogging Girl Blogging Tips for Beginners In this globally networked world, keeping a blog is a contemporary and hassle-free way in which to connect with others. Whether you wish to promote an event, raise awareness of a charity, keep others up to date with your business developments or just stay in touch with family and friends,...
    • Closet Organizers Keep You Organized | Blog Marketing 0 The last thing that you want to have happen is for your closets become so messy that you can’t find anything that you’re looking for. Although there are a number of...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized - Views: ()Too many...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:What's Wrong With These Pictures?Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Irreverant Observations - Views: (30)I was walking by a...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized - Views: ()Too many...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized - Views: ()Too many...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized - Views: ()Too many...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized - Views: ()Too many...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Uncategorized - Views: ()Too many...
    • Best posts on Squirrelman's Nutzy World from Nov 2009 Too many posts to handle? If you missed out on a great post from last month, here's a quick digest of the top posts that you may want to check out:What's Wrong With These Pictures?Posted on Sunday, November 1st, 2009 in Irreverant Observations - Views: (30)I was walking by a...
    Search in blogs by BlogSearchQuery.com
    5 Online Store Search Results

      • Is This The Most Popular Hobby In The World? There are many hobbies that people enjoy. Some people have a hobby that is a consuming passion, others its just something that is an enjoyable way to pass the time. There are lots of different hobbies, some depending on the area of the world the hobbyist lives in. For example,...
      • winter_lake Lake House Living in Winter We use our lake house as a week-end retreat all year long.  It is close enough (90 minutes) that we just want to be there as often as possible, no matter what the weather.  We enjoy our pre-retirement vacation home that much. Although we live in the mid-south, using our lake house...
      • What to Look for in Professional Pet Grooming by Bryce Smith Billions of dollars are spent in this country each year on our pets. This not only includes pet food, accessories, toys and luxury items, it also includes grooming. The health of your pet is essential and finding a dependable and well established grooming service to supply your...
      • Link Calibre S Chronograph watch Another innovation technology: When is in the ordinary time display mode, the dial plate two curved semicircle scale divisions shoulder return to dial the type ten thousand calendar functions (accurately to 2099, period cannot correct); But when is in the time pattern, its demonstration accuracy reaches as high as for...
      • MoneyBallers 2009 - Fantasy Baseball Results (PF Bloggers 2009 Standings) Best Reads of the Week: 2009 PF Blogger Fantasy Baseball League Edition This year, I got a chance to play my first season of fantasy baseball. Like most rookies in their first year... I got my ass handed to me. To be completely honest, I really didn't have a clue what was going on until halfway through the season. And since I...
      • Do One Thing: Write A Letter Regarding Something You Care About. This week's Do One Thing comes courtesy of something my wife did a few months ago - she wrote a letter. An honest to goodness, pen on paper letter to a local restaurant here in town. When we first moved here last summer, we received a gift certificate to a...
      • Procrastination In my search for what to do about my current feeling that I'm slutting around with my writing, I've decided that I'm procrastinating. I need to write, not worry about whether I can take a break to work on a second project. If I need to take a break from...
      • Prosper Standing Order Analyzer RateLadder.com Launches Standing Order Analyzer Introducing the Prosper Standing Order Analyzer, the second in a series of live Crystal Reports. This is the actual Prosper Standing Order Analyzer that I use when evaluating standing order loan rates. For input it takes the high and low debt to income ratio as well as the high and...
      • Free Tool: Interesting site to find good domain name If you are interested to find a good domain name but have no idea on how to get started. I have experienced this like you before, and finally I found a cool web site called Bust A Name (http://www.BustAName.com/). Starting I do not really know how to use the function...
      • woman and rose photo, online dating Paving The Way To The Future Of Dating Services Just as little as 20 years ago the way you usually met another person was through a friend. Maybe they would set-up a blind date for the two of you to meet and get to know each other. Anyone who has ever been on a bad blind date will tell...
      Blog search by BlogSearchQuery.com

      Blog Search Query Tags:

      business applications real time manipulation SEO web reader postings Writing for Your Blog peers blog personal growth traffic implementation

      Filed under: manipulation

      hypos says...

      Rien que pour lire les chroniques d'Alain Koskos, il faudrait prendre un abonnement chez Arret sur Images !

      L'une des dernières publiées s'intitule : "Des barbares comme vous et moi", au sujet de l'Album "Hitler dans mon salon, photos privées d'Allemagne".

      Un article qui dénonce  - en images - les distorsions que peut subir le "devoir de mémoire"...

       

      Extraits (Sans les images & photos insérés dans l'article) :

      Les éditions Les Échappés, créées par Charlie-Hebdo, publient un album intitulé Hitler dans mon salon, photos privées d'Allemagne, 1933-1945. De quoi s'agit-il ? Des centaines de photos prises par des soldats allemands et collectionnées par Riss, directeur de la rédaction dudit hebdo.

      [...]

      En trois lignes, le ton est donné. Rien ne différencie plus ce soldat de votre père, et assurément ses photographies pourraient figurer dans votre album de famille

      [...]

      « C'est la grande leçon et la vertu de ce recueil. Les barbares étaient des humains comme vous et moi. Ne pas l'oublier est le premier enjeu du devoir de mémoire. »

      Et voilà ! Emballez, c'est pesé. Le devoir de mémoire consiste désormais à se souvenir sans cesse que ces assassins auraient pu être vous ou moi. Des gens dont on peut comprendre, expliquer les comportements : « Ils aiment ou ils se résignent à Hitler. Ils pensent qu'il a raison de dire ce qu'il dit, de faire ce qu'il fait. Ou bien ils font semblant de le penser (…) ils sont ordinaires. »

      [...]

      « Les barbares étaient des humains comme vous et moi. » Vous savez bien qu'on ne peut rien opposer à cet argument. L'avantage, c'est que l'écrire, le répéter à longueur de ligne permet d'évacuer toute autre question.

      Enfin tout de même, il y a des "comme vous et moi" qu'il faut prononcer très vite parce qu'à l'évidence, il existe deux sortes d'humains. C'est ce que nous rappellent les deux parties de l'ouvrage : la première, titrée NOUS AUTRES, montre la vie de ces braves SS qui faisaient de jolis feux de camp dans les années 30 avant de s'en aller délivrer l'Europe du bolchevisme et de la pieuvre juive.

      [...]

      La seconde s'intitule NOUS ET LES AUTRES. Les autres, ce sont les Tziganes, les Juifs, et tous ceux qui vont passer à la casserole. « Plus le temps passe, plus les photos de famille des uns et des autres deviennent des photos communes à tous », nous serine la préface. A tous, oui, à condition de n'être ni Tzigane ni Juif ni communiste.

      [...]

      Car l'ordonnancement du livre suit le même but que la préface : nous encourager à nous identifier aux braves soldats allemands qui n'ont fait qu'obéir aux ordres et qui ont vu bien des horreurs.

      [...]

      Surtout pas à leurs victimes ou à leurs descendants. A ce "NOUS", et pas à ces "AUTRES", pendus, gazés, brûlés ou fusillés, qui n'ont pas été fichus de constituer des albums photos pour la postérité, c'est vrai quoi, merde, qui a une photo de son grand-père en pyjama rayé made in Auschwitz ou Buchenwald, hein ? Qui ?

       

       

       

       

      Filed under: Manipulation

      From Mohammed Amine Nasseri's Portfolio.

      Filed under: manipulation

      renzokuomo says...

      Filed under: manipulation

      cherrykat says...

      Image Fulgurator

      The Image Fulgurator is a device for physically manipulating photographs. It intervenes when a photo is being taken, without the photographer being able to detect anything. The manipulation is only visible on the photo afterwards.

      In principle, the Fulgurator can be used anywhere where there is another camera nearby that is being used with a flash. It operates via a kind of reactive flash projection that enables an image to be projected on an object exactly at the moment when someone else is photographing it. The intervention is unobtrusive because it takes only a few milliseconds. Every photo another photographer takes of an object at which the Fulgurator is also aimed is affected by the manipulation. Hence visual information can be smuggled unnoticed into the images of others.

      </object>

      </object>

           

      Filed under: manipulation