Wed, Feb 28, 2007 - Page 6 News List

Web site offering fake social network misuses model pics

NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , NEW YORK

Popularity was never easily measured, until the advent of social-networking sites.

Now, prospective employers and others can gain insight into an applicant's lifestyle and character by looking at a person's social-networking page, including the roster of friends.

So what if a job applicant's networking page lacks friends?

Enter FakeYourSpace.com, a business founded by Brant Walker, which offered users of MySpace.com and similar sites a way to enhance their page with photographs and comments from hired "friends" -- mainly attractive models -- for US$0.99 a month each.

FakeYourSpace was doing very well, attracting 50,000 hits a day, until a service that provided the photographs of the models, iStockPhoto.com, noticed that use and objected to it.

IStockPhoto's vice president for marketing, Kelly Thompson,said its licensing agreement did not allow Web sites to post photos that might lead the average person to "think that the model endorses" the product, Web site or person in question.

IStockPhoto's network of 30,000 photographers police the Internet for such contractual infractions. When they noticed how FakeYourSpace was using the photos, iStockPhoto asked Walker to stop using them.

He complied, and FakeYourSpace, while still viewable online, will not be fully operational again until tomorrow. Walker is searching for models through agency and online auditions to replace those that had been provided by iStockPhoto, which was recently purchased by Getty Images.

Walker's site misrepresents people, but Walker, 26, said he thought that its intent was more altruistic than fraudulent.

He said the idea came to him when he noticed, while browsing MySpace pages, that "some people would have a lot of good-looking friends, and others didn't."

His idea, he said, was "to turn cyberlosers into social-networking magnets" by providing fictitious postings from attractive people.

The postings are written by the client or by Walker and his employees, who base the messages on the client's requests.

At the moment, Walker's Web site is legal as long as the content his service posts is legitimately licensed.

Walker's second business, BreakYourSpace.com, removes unwanted friends from a user's profile by way of a third-party messenger.

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