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Friday, July 26, 2019

CBS investigation: Fake Court Orders Manipulate G00gle Search Results

Image. Perception. Reputation. Whatever you wish to call it, in a digital world, replete with anonymous thumb up or down feedback, search results can determine winners and losers in business, politics, or entertainment. G00gle said it works hard to spot bad actors trying to game the system. I wonder if that includes G00gle taking a good look in the mirror?

So how does one remove unflattering information from search results? It ain't easy. Much of what is posted on the interwebs is protected opinion speech. "Since it's difficult to change those results, many small businesses are paying thousands to so-called reputation management companies to make negative web pages disappear."

Jim Axelrod & Andy Bast at CBS News reveal some of the details:
"One of the only ways to get Google to permanently remove a link from its search results is with a court order from a judge. CBS News sorted through thousands of these court orders and spotted small businesses from all across America trying to clean up their reputations. But we also spotted a problem: Dozens of the court documents were fakes.

"It never even crossed my mind that people would have the guts to actually go out there and just forge a court document," said Eugene Volokh, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who specializes in internet law.

Volokh points out that forging a court document is criminal.

"Part of it is just how brazen it is. They take a judge's signature and they copy it from one order to another order and they pretend something is a court order. It's cheaper and it's faster -- if they don't get caught," Volokh said.

CBS News worked with Volokh and identified more than 60 fraudulent court orders sent to Google. Some are obviously fake, like one with a case number of "1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9." Others are more sophisticated, and appear to be drawn from nine different federal courts across the country. The most recent fake court document we identified was submitted in April.

It's not just about making a bad review of a local restaurant disappear. CBS News uncovered bogus court documents submitted on behalf of two convicted criminals who wanted Google to forget about their crimes. Both were child sex offenders.

Of the more than 60 phony documents, we found that 11 had signatures forged from judges in Hamilton County, Ohio. One of those fake documents was submitted for a client who hired Web Savvy, LLC, the company run by Rooney. That's why we invited him to meet us with hidden cameras rolling..."
It's a tit-tat boiler plate exchange where the subject denies everything - and thanks for stopping by, fellas - but worth a read on a slow news day.

Google declined the CBS request for an interview, which is not surprising in light of the recent keen interest the Justice Dept. has shown in BIG TECH.

Justice Department Is Investigating Google, Apple, Facebook And Amazon For Monopolistic Activities


H/t: Ars Technica