Visla Eraclaire
04-02-09, 11:14 AM
So, I was having a conversation with a colleague of mine about an event that is not so recent, but it happened to come up. I don't know if anyone remembers the less than well intentioned prank call scam (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strip_search_prank_call_scam) perpetrated against various rural fast food restaurants. Honestly, though it is extremely NWS, the ED article (http://www.encyclopediadramatica.com/Louise_Ogborn) actually gives a much better rundown and includes a clip from a tv news segment about it.
The basic story is: Someone calls and tells you they are either your superior within your work organization or the cops. They tell you to do things that anyone with a shred of sanity should know are not permissible. And yet tons of people complied, one with extreme gusto in the above case.
I was not shocked, really. I don't really think much of the average person, and so it doesn't surprise me that they'd do heinous things if they had an authority figure (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millgram_experiment) telling them to do it. My colleague was more surprised that people are genuinely that ignorant of what police can and cannot do, even presuming they believed the unsupported assertion that the person on the phone was the police at all.
So, general questions, how gullible are people? Is this a fluke or do you think it's pretty commonplace? How far do you think people are willing to go based on a bare claim of authority?
The topic seems especially appropriate right after April Fools Day. Feel free to tell some stories of people you tricked. Hopefully they will be somewhat less serious than the cited examples.
The basic story is: Someone calls and tells you they are either your superior within your work organization or the cops. They tell you to do things that anyone with a shred of sanity should know are not permissible. And yet tons of people complied, one with extreme gusto in the above case.
I was not shocked, really. I don't really think much of the average person, and so it doesn't surprise me that they'd do heinous things if they had an authority figure (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millgram_experiment) telling them to do it. My colleague was more surprised that people are genuinely that ignorant of what police can and cannot do, even presuming they believed the unsupported assertion that the person on the phone was the police at all.
So, general questions, how gullible are people? Is this a fluke or do you think it's pretty commonplace? How far do you think people are willing to go based on a bare claim of authority?
The topic seems especially appropriate right after April Fools Day. Feel free to tell some stories of people you tricked. Hopefully they will be somewhat less serious than the cited examples.