bunn: (shadow)
bunn ([personal profile] bunn) wrote2007-08-03 01:31 pm

Suspicious substance advertising

I am intrigued to discover that the Metropolitan Police are advertising on Google Adwords under the term 'peroxide'.Google peroxide, and you get this ad from the Met:

"Peroxide
www.met.police.uk Suspect it? Report it. Call the Anti-terrorist Hotline."

(the way this works is that the Met will be paying Google a certain amount per click for every person that clicks on the ad)

??? It seems a strangely untargeted way of getting the anti-terrorism message across. Surely you would get an awful lot of hairdressers and amateur chemists for every terrorist...?

Of course, I couldn't resist then googling a whole series of explosive keywords (gelignite, home made bomb, how to make bombs, how to make car bombs, ammonium nitrate, fertilizer bombs, sulphuric acid), but I was unable to find any further Met advertising. Perhaps my knowledge of the chemistry of mayhem is lacking.
ext_27570: Richard in tricorn hat (Default)

[identity profile] sigisgrim.livejournal.com 2007-08-03 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Of course, I couldn't resist then googling a whole series of explosive keywords

Ooh, you rebel! You realise that you will now that a plain clothed policeman in a plain clothed police car sitting outside your house for the next couple of weeks.

Or maybe they'll be tapping your 'phone and intercepting your network traffic; or maybe not, as that's technical. ;-)
ext_189645: (Default)

[identity profile] bunn.livejournal.com 2007-08-03 01:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I was intrigued by the advertising concept really and trying to see if I could determine the strategy behind it. But as a side-effect of all this googling, I now know a lot more about blowing things up than I did.

Customers, politicians, Merseyside police and the people behind the 'Sheila's Wheels' advert - BE WARNED! :-D