AT&T = American Traitors & Tricksters

June 29, 2008

The Consumerist made a recent post on AT&T spinning their wire-tapping schemes and violations of privacy. Check out this oh so clever advertisement:

The catch phrase “Simplify. Organize. Liberate.” relates to the ease and freedom one gains with Online billing, using the word liberate in the obvious sense of becoming worry-free when it comes to paying bills with electronic automation . However, in a twisted turn America is a liberator of sorts and our own cherished liberty protects us from an oppressive society. Yet, AT&T playing spy games with our phone/cell and Internet lines clearly undercuts liberty. Moving on “Ms. Suspicious Has Nothing to Hide.” This captures the favored argument: if you aren’t guilty then you have nothing to hide. Then it moves on to “Well, she has a little to hide…” And AT&T would know, because they’ve read her e-mail, followed her web patterns, and listened to her phone calls. They know all about Ms. Suspicious and her sticky notes covering the Apple logo. AT&T should go the full nine and advertise themselves as a “big brother” looking out for you!

The last part really tickles my goose, “Online Liberation Movement”. Way to make a joke out of trampling privacy rights and even net neutrality. In the end, God bless online bill bay – freeing us to do more important things in life like  “[assisting] the government in its secret surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans”. [EFF]

Lastly, I applied for a CIA Librarian job a few weeks ago, not sure if my posts hinder or help my chances, probably the former.

Entry Filed under: Government documents. Tags: , , , .

4 Comments Add your own

  • 1. neverbesocial  |  June 29, 2008 at 4:58 pm

    Hahaha, that is such a terrible ad. I must say, it has to be tough to promote shizz like this. Can’t believe they services marked ‘Online Liberation Movement’. Who are they trying market this too? It seems to me you’d promote this to older people who are not confident of computers, but they are trying to make it hip and cool like they need younger adults to join the Online Billing Revolution (sm).

    Reply
  • 2. liskid  |  July 1, 2008 at 8:38 am

    @neverbesocial I don’t know who their target audience is but building a sense of community around online billpay is just odd.

    Reply
  • 3. Perpetual Memory Loss  |  July 2, 2008 at 5:43 pm

    Wow that’s terrible. Big Brother is watching you. BTW like the look.

    Reply

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The LiS Kid: Tales of a Librarian in Cyborg/Patron Relations by Philippe Cloutier is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at theliskid.wordpress.com.