Benjamin Vanderford is a video game designer,
musician for
Record Label Records, and
San Francisco resident
who created a faked video beheading and propagated it on the
Internet. The hoax film was directed by his friend and roomate
Robert Martin and filmed by Robert's girlfriend Laurie
Kirchner
[1807]. The video was posted on an
militant Islamist website, and depicted
Vanderford as a hostage, pleading that the United States
immediately leave
Iraq. The
introductory title claimed it was
Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi "killing an American."
FBI special agent LaRae Quy said the FBI "will pursue
any and all legal avenues for prosecution. At this point the matter
is still under investigation." The FBI has since declined
prosecution.
Vanderford is heard saying on the video "if we
don't [leave Iraq], everyone is gonna be killed in this way ... I
have been offered for exchange for prisoners here in Iraq."
The
video was initially released on the
Kazaa and
Soulseek filesharing networks with titles like "new
Iraqi execution", the very day that the
Nick Berg execution tape was released. People
searching for the Nick Berg video on Kazaa might come across the
Vanderford video and it would spread in this method. One of the
reasons Vanderford stated for creating the video was to test how
effective this distribution system would be. It was an anonymous
file sharer, not Benjamin Vanderford, who apparently sent it to the
Islamist website where it gained mainstream coverage. This
technique, of releasing a video simultaneously as a major
media event on a
peer to peer network, is predicted to become widespread for use by
political agitators, and advertisements. When
Siegfried and Roy
had their unfortunate tiger incident many porn websites tried to
capitalize on the event by posting video advertisements on Kazaa
under the guise of a "Siegfried and Roy tiger
attack!"
Motivation
In interviews Vanderford gave his
reasoning for creating the hoax as follows:
To illustrate the
concept of media concentration, but not because of corporate
ownership as is usually the issue, but because of the effects of
the wire systems, such
as the Associated Press and Reuters. Vanderford knew that if any of the
large wire agencies mistakenly believed the video was real, their
wire releases would be immediately be broadcast by the wire agency
users such as radio, TV news, and newspapers, even though it was
possible for those users to independently view the video (which
Vanderford deliberately created to be false looking). Vanderford
has compared this to the concept of monoculture of the Microsoft Windows
operating system, although he places the blame not on the wire
agencies but on their users, who he feels have a cultural
"laziness" prone to uncritically recycling press releases of this
kind. Vanderford claims he first encountered this culture when he
used false press credentials to sneak into the E3 video game convention, and noticed it amongst the
video game journalism
community.To protest the lack of meaningful dialogue in the
mainstream media over the validity of the Nick Berg video, which Vanderford felt looked
too falsifiable to be judged as real so immediately by the
mainstream media. Although Vanderford himself did not believe the
Berg video was fake, nevertheless he felt that the points raised by
the Nick Berg conspiracy theories were too compelling
to be ignored by the media. For this reason, Vanderford used the
same chair in his video as was featured in the Abu Ghraib pictures
and the Nick Berg video, he did not show a continuous scene of
beheading, but rather showed an edited version where Vanderford
already lay dead, and in which the camera was always zoomed out.
Vanderford has also said that if the media continues to accept such
unverifiable videos as real, terrorists would realize that and
simply start creating completely fake videos. Vanderford has
claimed that this is in line with the modus operandi of groups like
Hamas, who he feels spend an
inordinate amount of time using Adobe Photoshop to create promotional
flyers.To illustrate the potential for peer to peer networks to be
a completely democratic and decentralized form of communication
following a mainstream media story or event. Vanderford knew that
those looking for the Nick Berg video would turn to Kazaa and other
P2P file sharing programs to
find this, allowing an interloper to create falsely named videos to
contain whatever statement they might want.Vanderford is the
creator of the video game
Good Vs. Bad 2, and is half of the experimental music
group
fluorescent grey. He also has an
experimental rap musical project called
the great white
hype, and heads up the band
Penis Genius. Penis Genius played its first
show on
September
16th,
2006 with
Tensegrity
Nine at
Kimo's in
San
Francisco.
External links
Video game designs by
Benjamin Vanderford Great White Hype - Benjamin's rap
group Experimental music video by Ben Vanderford
with fluorescent grey