When Web 2.0 Attacks: Modernista!'s Nifty Non-Site Backfires

  |  April 2, 2008 

modernista.png

Everyone loves Modernista's distributed Web presence. The forward thinking site has drawn accolades from all manner of creative types for sending visitors elsewhere in their quest for agency info and client samples. See for yourself. Clicking through ought to keep you here but with the addition a red navigation widget in the upper left corner. The menu taxonomy consists of links to a Wikipedia entry on the firm, client creative hosted on Flickr and Yahoo, social bookmarking links and a Facebook presence. Very 2.0. Here's an agency that gets it, is the general view.

Except there's one little snag. Electric Artists CEO Marc Schiller twittered yesterday about a new note on the agency's Wikipedia entry citing the reference site's displeasure with being used as a vehicle for marketing. Here's the huffy objection:

The website for this company obscures our logo with their own, and may lead the viewer to believe that Wikipedia serves as their homepage provider. This is not correct. Wikipedia has no affiliation with Modernista and has requested that Modernista cease this use of our website.

Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia written from a neutral point of view and does not endorse nor condemn Modernista, but is opposed to being used as a promotional mechanism in this manner for any third party.

Not a huge catastrophe for Modernista, but fascinating nevertheless. Just goes to show: even though the ethics of Web 2.0 clearly favor open communication, including linking, the interests of individual players within that ecosystem may still collide violently.

Attend SES New York March 19-23 to learn the latest in social media marketing, integrated marketing, SEO, PPC, and more.

COMMENTSCommenting policy

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Zachary

Managing Editor Zach Rodgers oversees ClickZ's award-winning coverage of news and trends in digital marketing. As a journalist he has reported on the rise of web companies, data markets, ad technologies, and government Internet policy, among other subjects. His stories have appeared in Mashable, Search Engine Watch and Kauffman publications, among others, and he has been cited by government and advocacy groups such as the Center for Digital Democracy, U.S. PIRG, the U.K. Independent. He previously held editorial roles at TurboAds, WirelessAdWatch, Internet Advertising Report, ChannelSeven.com, and Datamation. He can be found on Twitter at @zachrodgers.

SES London
SES London

February 20-24, 2012

SES New York
SES New York

March 19-23, 2012

SES Shanghai
SES Shanghai

April 16-18, 2012

SES Toronto
SES Toronto

June 11-13, 2012

SES San Francisco
SES San Francisco

August 13-17, 2012

WHITE PAPERS whitepaper

CLICKZ TOPICS

0