Hate Groups Will Hate These Ads

Published: 13 April 2001 y., Friday
The Internet portal and Tolerance.org, a new website created by the Southern Poverty Law Center, launched the campaign Wednesday. "It's a novel approach to reaching people," said Jim Carrier, the director of Tolerance.org. "Now we can get our message to them on their own turf." Yahoo is donating $3 million worth of ad space to Tolerance.org over the next three years. The ads will also pop up when the portal's search engine is used to look for 75 keywords such as nazi, hate or diversity. Parenting and education websites are another focus of the ad campaign. "Tolerance needs to be taught at a young age. It's hard to take a 16-year-old kid who's a skin head and teach him to embrace tolerance," Carrier said. The five ads designed by Tolerance.org are hyper-linked to the website, which contains information, forums and news on hate groups. "Bias doesn't just happen. What are you teaching your kids?" one ad asks. "A hate crime occurs every hour. You can do something to stop it," says another. Each message ends with an admonition to "fight hate and promote tolerance." Carrier estimates that 40 million people will see the ads before the end of the year, based on an analysis of Yahoo's Web traffic.
Šaltinis: wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The Most Destructive Viruses of All Time

With the SQL Slammer virus, more than 500,000 servers worldwide were infected, there was a general slowdown all over the Internet more »

The proposal

KGB in Belarusian web more »

ICANN approves six user community groups

Organization takes first step toward giving individuals a voice in how the Internet is run more »

U.N. tech summit ends

Many tough decisions deferred for 2 years more »

Microsoft brought legal action

Lindows.com ordered to drop Lindows name more »

PayPal Slashes Micropayments Fees

PayPal wants a slice of the online music pie more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Europe 'broadband revolution' leads the world

The future is burning bright for the ICT manufacturing and services across the European Union as the continent enjoys a "broadband revolution" and takes up global leadership in the mobile sector more »

Sweden proposes drastic fines for spammers

The Swedish government tabled a draft law that would allow it to to crack down on people who flood email inboxes with unwanted advertisements, so-called spam. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »