Se acabó la guerra de Irak (brillante hackeo al NY Times)

Las mentes detrás de la "acción" son las mismas que intervinieron en "The Yes Men" (Foto: captura de pantalla del periódico hackeado)

Durante más de 6 meses, cientos de escritores, artistas y activistas elaboraron cuidadosamente el proyecto de “hackear” el New York Times. Ayer, 12 de noviembre, de forma muy ajustada y coordianda, repartieron miles de copias de una -falsa- edición del legendario periódico. En clave de crónica desde el futuro (4 de julio del 2009) el papel relataba el fin de la guerra de Irak, entre otras tantas expresiones de deseeo, como la instalación de un sistema de salud pública,  la abolición del lobby, la restricciones a los salarios de los directores de grandes empresas.

Según pude ver en el video (y se relata en el email) los transeuntes quedaban atónitos, y se volvían preguntando: “es verdad, se ha acabado la guerra?” “podria ser verdad si lo quisiéramos” respondían los ciento de voluntarios que pusieron en marcha el media hacking.

La versión online (que lamentablemente no funcionaba a las 2 de la mañana -GMT+1-) no tiene desperdicio; copio debajo el email completo segun lo recibí (en inglés)

November 12, 2008
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:
writers@nytimes-se.com
917-202-5479
718-208-0684
415-533-3961

“SPECIAL” NEW YORK TIMES BLANKETS CITIES WITH MESSAGE OF HOPE AND CHANGE
Thousands of volunteers behind elaborate operation

* PDF: http://www.nytimes-se.com/pdf
* Ongoing video releases: http://www.nytimes-se.com/video

* The New York Times responds: http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/12/pranksters-spoof-the-times/

Hundreds of independent writers, artists, and activists are claiming
credit for an elaborate project, 6 months in the making, in which 1.2
million copies of a “special edition” of the New York Times were
distributed in cities across the U.S. by thousands of volunteers.

The papers, dated July 4th of next year, were headlined with
long-awaited news: “IRAQ WAR ENDS”. The edition, which bears the same
look and feel as the real deal, includes stories describing what the
future could hold: national health care, the abolition of corporate
lobbying, a maximum wage for CEOs, etc. There was also a spoof site, at
http://www.nytimes-se.com/.

“Is this true?  I wish it were true!” said one reader. “It can be true,
if we demand it.”

“We wanted to experience what it would look like, and feel like, to
read headlines we really want to read. It’s about what’s possible, if
we think big and act collectively,” said Steve Lambert, one of the
project’s organizers and an editor of the paper.

“This election was a massive referendum on change. There’s a lot of
hope in the air, but there’s a lot of uncertainty too. It’s up to all
of us now to make these headlines come true,” said Beka Economopoulos,
one of the project’s organizers.

“It doesn’t stop here. We gave Obama a mandate, but he’ll need mandate
after mandate after mandate to do what we elected him to do. He’ll need
a lot of support, and yes, a lot of pressure,” said Andy Bichlbaum,
another project organizer and editor of the paper.

The people behind the project are involved in a diverse range of
groups, including The Yes Men, the Anti-Advertising Agency, CODEPINK,
United for Peace and Justice, Not An Alternative, May First/People
Link, Improv Everywhere, Evil Twin, and Cultures of Resistance.

In response to the spoof, the New York Times said only, “We are looking
into it.”  Alex S. Jones, former Times reporter who is an authority on
the history of the paper, says: “I would say if youÕve got one, hold on
to it. It will probably be a collectorÕs item.”

1 Respuesta a “Se acabó la guerra de Irak (brillante hackeo al NY Times)”


  1. 1 Sergio

    EL chaval que reparte el NY Times es uno de los de Yes Men, el que dá la conferencia mas presisamente.

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