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Adidas’ social media campaign backfires with anti-Semitic tweets
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Kasper Rorsted, chief executive officer of Adidas AG.
Krisztian Bocsi | Bloomberg | Getty Images
A social media campaign celebrating the launch of Adidas’ new gear for the Arsenal soccer team in London went awry Monday, with the retailer’s U.K. Twitter account sending out anti-Semitic messages and other inappropriate slurs to its more than 800,000 followers.
Twitter users were encouraged by Adidas to tweet the hashtag #DareToCreate, which — using artificial intelligence — would then prompt a reply from Adidas’ account with photos of virtual Arsenal jerseys embellished with users’ Twitter handles on the back of them.
But the campaign was interrupted when accounts with Twitter handles like “@GasAllJewss,” “@MadelineMcCann” and “@96wasnotenough” started tweeting #DareToCreate. Shirts were being created and posted with messages like “Innocent Hitler” on the back.
People with those accounts were referring to tragic incidents like the Hillsborough disaster, the worst in British sporting history, when 96 people were crushed inside a stadium in 1989, and the disappearance of British child Madeleine McCann in 2007.
Representatives from Adidas and Arsenal didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.
The tweets have all since been deleted from Adidas’ U.K. account. But this is yet another example of a social media account generating messages, using artificial intelligence and bots, gone wrong.
Another instance was when a user tricked Uber’s customer service Twitter account ( “@Uber_Support”) by changing his name to n-word racist slur. Uber’s account then responded to his message: “We’re so sorry about that, N—–!”
This also calls into question again how Twitter is regulating the platform.
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