A big story in the tech world of an acquisition by Google of WiFi provider ICOA, reported by many news outlets Monday, was a hoax, both companies said. An announcement transmitted by PRWeb, a website that distributes press releases for a fee, said Google had acquired ICOA for $400 million. PRWeb said the release was planted by someone falsely claiming to represent ICOA, CNN reported Wednesday. "Even with reasonable safeguards identity theft occurs, on occasion, across all the major wire services," PRWeb said on its company blog. "We have removed the fraudulent release and turned the matter over to the proper authorities for further investigation." Financial experts said the hoax was likely an illegal effort to inflate ICOA's stock, which jumped in price dramatically Monday with hundreds of millions of shares being bought and sold before the stock was frozen. The incident shows how reporting can go wrong in the fast-paced world of Web journalism, media experts said. "With something like this, there are a lot of blogs and websites that build their reputation on the tech world," Kelly McBride at the Poynter Institute, a non-profit devoted to the study and teaching of journalism, said. News outlets such as The Associated Press and tech-watching site CNET had carried news of the purported Google-ICOA purchase. "If Google is spending $400 million to buy something, there are people who are expected to have something to say about that and they want to be in that mix," McBride said. "Once one organization does it, other organizations tend to place even more blind faith," she said. "Once the AP [for example] does it, then everyone does it."
GMT 11:44 2018 Wednesday ,10 October
Palestinian sentenced to 10 months in prison over Facebook postsGMT 15:17 2018 Wednesday ,03 October
Twitter allows publishers to monetise video views globallyGMT 19:45 2018 Sunday ,16 September
WhatsApp calls unblocked in UAE? TRA respondsGMT 14:17 2018 Thursday ,06 September
Gazprom-Media and Yandex discussing amicable agreementGMT 12:04 2018 Wednesday ,05 September
Kremlin: watchdog’s claims against Google do not mean crisisGMT 08:13 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
Facebook acknowledges social media's risks to democracyGMT 08:47 2018 Sunday ,21 January
Twitter says Russia-linked accounts more widespreadGMT 09:47 2018 Saturday ,20 January
Amazon boosts Prime fees for US monthly subscribersMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor