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"Amazon ambassadors were trained to defend Jeff Bezos and clap back at Bernie Sanders under a program codenamed 'Veritas.'"

Veritas. The irony ...

Edit: meant to add ...

> “To address speculation and false assertions in social media and online forums about the quality of the FC [Fulfillment Center] associate experience ..."

Experience.

It's not work. It is an "experience". Like a cruise, or a brand new TV.

(And you are not a grunt. You are an "associate". You have equity. You matter. The bottle you pee in matters too ...)

That's a bit distressing, actually. "Veritas" is Harvard's motto, and perhaps they were influenced by that. But perhaps better known is Project Veritas:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Veritas

To quote Wikipedia's description:

The group produces deceptively edited videos of its undercover operations, which use secret recordings to allege misconduct and corruption in mainstream media organizations and progressive groups. Project Veritas uses entrapment to generate bad publicity for its targets, and has propagated disinformation and conspiracy theories in its videos and operations.

Veritas is Latin for truth. The first principle shown in the leaked document is to "tell your truth". I expect the name is chosen for that meaning rather than an homage to Project Veritas or Harvard.
> "tell your truth" ...

I actually hadn't connected the dots ...

  (Still, it must be said, to use such a "lofty" latinism for something as mundane as an astroturf campaign - when "veritas" evokes an almost "absolute" truth ...
... rubs me the wrong way.)
They certainly know the meaning of the Latin, but these two names/mottoes are very well known. When I saw that an astroturfing campaign was called Veritas, the name Project Veritas leapt directly to mind. If I were them I'd have picked a different name. It's not a good association.
> Project Veritas

That is one sickening use of the term, if ever have I seen one ... yuck.-

Good to see Wikipedia's still keeping their articles nice and neutral
I removed the extensive footnotes to make it more readable. You can go find them at the article itself. Everything they say is well documented. This really is simply the facts of the organization.

Project Veritas exists to make other organizations look bad, using false narratives. There's no way to cast that in neutral language without becoming false.

(Heck. I think Amazon should -own- the whole urinating in a bottle thing ...

... go ahead and give one to all "Associates".-

Call it the Amazon Associate Portable Potty and Lavatory Extension, "APPLE", and be done with it ... :)

And then what? Amazon has then told all its employees that their plight is less important than making a poor joke at the expense of our competitor. Those employees are people with feelings.

  I should have used some sort of <irony> marker or something ...
If these accounts are meant to be real people, why do so many have stock images as profile pictures?
What kind of pictures do you think people hired to be witty and funny are going to choose for their troll accounts if left to their own devices? Profile pictures probably got locked down on day 1 to prevent them from doing anything that could potentially offend anyone.
Probably because it's more effective for a single real person to operate many accounts, and you don't want all these accounts to have your face.
I'm genuinely surprised by how bad Amazon is at this. I had assumed a super rich and tech savvy company would be better at manipulating digital conversations than Amazon appears to be.

Maybe this isn't too important to Amazon and they aren't sending their A-team or putting a lot of resources into the effort. Maybe it is important and they are just getting started and will improve over time.

While Amazon's tweets seem lame it is hard for me to imagine what effective pro-Amazon messaging on twitter would look like. They have to overcome the problem that complaining about your job or a company's demanding work practices is natural, defending a company is rather less natural.

Massive companies don't do subtle well. Social manipulation is hard because it can't be obvious; certainly not as transparent as what Amazon has been doing. Even before this leak it was painfully obvious which Twitter accounts were shilling on Amazon's dime.

An effective campaign would probably more closely resemble what Russia has been doing for the last 6+ years.

I imagine it could be as simple as Bezos finding some trusted goon and instructing the goon to find a shady company with a history of doing this kind of thing well and then sending money based on results.