AHIP and its cohorts in the insurance industry have found another outlet for their astroturfing efforts, by bribing game players on Facebook.
Health insurance industry trade groups opposed to President Obama's health care reform bill are paying Facebook users fake money -- called "virtual currency" -- to send letters to Congress protesting the bill....
Facebook users play a social game, like "FarmVille" or "Friends For Sale." They get addicted to it. Eager to accelerate their progress inside the game, the gamers buy "virtual goods" such as a machine gun for "Mafia Wars." But these gamers don't buy these virtual goods with real money. They use virtual currency.
One of the ways you can get virtual currency is thorugh third-party offers, "usually companies like online movie rentals service Netflix -- who agree to give the gamer virtual currency so long as that gamer agrees to try a product or service." The astroturf group Get Health Reform Right, which includes AHIP, BCBS, and a number of other trade groups, is one of these third parties, offering virtual currency for anyone who will take a survey. That survey, "upon completion, automatically sends the following email to their Congressional Rep:
I am concerned a new government plan could cause me to lose the employer coverage I have today. More government bureaucracy will only create more problems, not solve the ones we have.
I write this as I'm watching Sen. Bob Bennett stand up on the Senate floor waving a stack of printed e-mails he's received from his constituents, who are "concerned a new government plan could cause me to lose the employer coverage I have today," and are telling him "more government bureaucracy will only create more problems, not solve the ones we have."