This is digital extortion. They should agree to pay but do an FBI sting operation instead.
SilverElfin · 4h ago
The FBI is not going to act across borders and hunt down some scammer in Pakistan or Bangladesh (the countries mentioned in the article). It is prohibitively expensive, their governments won’t cooperate, and there are also geopolitical issues at play (for example Trump shunning India recently and getting more friendly with Pakistan).
SilverElfin · 4h ago
Is this really new? And is it even an Internet age thing? I saw that some small businesses in Texas are facing organized activism from conservative Islamic groups, who are threatening them with sustained protests if they don’t remove products that don’t fit their religious practice (like alcohol). The reality is that bullying and extortion and other forms of corrupt actions have always been around.
Maybe it’s easier now since someone on the other side of the planet can trivially post fake reviews and extort someone without any consequence since they’re in a different jurisdiction. But we should equally be suspicious of positive reviews. I have used contractors that had great online reviews only to be shocked at the poor quality of their work and the dishonest ways in which they handled my complaints.
My feeling - people need to shun their digital overlords like Google and rely on word of mouth again. At the same time, we need new laws to compel the largest tech platforms to do the right thing. They won’t if it is left to them.
slater · 4h ago
> I saw that some small businesses in Texas are facing organized activism from conservative Islamic groups, who are threatening them with sustained protests if they don’t remove products that don’t fit their religious practice (like alcohol)
You have any sources for this?
SilverElfin · 3h ago
Here’s one, but there are others, and you can find videos on social media
The people doing this are posting videos of them harassing store owners on TikTok, to encourage others who follow them to do the same. In some cases they’re targeting Muslim-owned stores for not being Islamic enough, and in other cases they’re just targeting stores that are in “their neighborhoods”. Either way, they are trying to make it so that their business drops so that they’re forced to comply or so they give up and sell (to an Islamic buyer for cheap).
Note that this is part of a larger playbook of creating separate Islamic societies that has been see in other countries previously (like England, India, etc).
Maybe it’s easier now since someone on the other side of the planet can trivially post fake reviews and extort someone without any consequence since they’re in a different jurisdiction. But we should equally be suspicious of positive reviews. I have used contractors that had great online reviews only to be shocked at the poor quality of their work and the dishonest ways in which they handled my complaints.
My feeling - people need to shun their digital overlords like Google and rely on word of mouth again. At the same time, we need new laws to compel the largest tech platforms to do the right thing. They won’t if it is left to them.
You have any sources for this?
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15078883/Sharia-pat...
The people doing this are posting videos of them harassing store owners on TikTok, to encourage others who follow them to do the same. In some cases they’re targeting Muslim-owned stores for not being Islamic enough, and in other cases they’re just targeting stores that are in “their neighborhoods”. Either way, they are trying to make it so that their business drops so that they’re forced to comply or so they give up and sell (to an Islamic buyer for cheap).
Note that this is part of a larger playbook of creating separate Islamic societies that has been see in other countries previously (like England, India, etc).