MacMusic  |  PcMusic  |  440 Software  |  440 Forums  |  440TV  |  Zicos
profiling
Search

US-Funded 'Social Network' Attacking Pesticide Critics Shuts Down

Tuesday February 11, 2025. 08:00 AM , from Slashdot
US-Funded 'Social Network' Attacking Pesticide Critics Shuts Down
The US company v-Fluence secretly compiled profiles on over 500 food and environmental health advocates, scientists, and politicians in a private web portal to discredit critics of pesticides and GM crops. Following public backlash and corporate cancellations after its actions were revealed by the Guardian, the company announced it was shutting down the profiling service. The Guardian reports: The profiles -- part of an effort that was financed, in part, by US taxpayer dollars -- often provided derogatory information about the industry opponents and included home addresses and phone numbers and details about family members, including children. They were provided to members of an invite-only web portal where v-Fluence also offered a range of other information to its roster of more than 1,000 members. The membership included staffers of US regulatory and policy agencies, executives from the world's largest agrochemical companies and their lobbyists, academics and others.

The profiling was one element of a push to downplay pesticide dangers, discredit opponents and undermine international policymaking, according to court records, emails and other documents obtained by the non-profit newsroom Lighthouse Reports. Lighthouse collaborated with the Guardian, the New Lede, Le Monde, Africa Uncensored, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and other international media partners on the September 2024 publication of the investigation. News of the profiling and the private web portal sparked outrage and threats of litigation by some of the people and organizations profiled.

v-Fluence says it not only has eliminated the profiling, but also has made 'significant staff cuts' after the public exposure, according to Jay Byrne, the former Monsanto public relations executive who founded and heads the company. Byrne blamed the company's struggles on 'rising costs from continued litigator and activist harassment of our staff, partners, and clients with threats and misrepresentations.' He said the articles published about the company's profiling and private web portal were part of a 'smear campaign' which was based on 'false and misleading misrepresentations' that were 'not supported by any facts or evidence.' Adding to the company's troubles, several corporate backers and industry organizations have cancelled contracts with v-Fluence, according a post in a publication for agriculture professionals.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/02/11/0122253/us-funded-social-network-attacking-pesticide-critic...

Related News

News copyright owned by their original publishers | Copyright © 2004 - 2025 Zicos / 440Network
Current Date
Feb, Tue 11 - 14:14 CET