Culture, Israel

Israeli Foreign Ministry out to "conquer" bad image on internet

ynetMinistry, Israeli consulate in New York embark on mission to fight search results showing images of war-torn Gaza when asked to find ‘Israel’; plan to flood web with positive images of Jewish state courtesy of solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Anyone typing the word “Israel” on an internet search engine these days is likely to end up with results depicting war-torn Gaza Strip, courtesy of the Palestinians, the Foreign Ministry has found.
The ministry found that if one types the word “United Kingdom” into a search engine a picture of London’s Big Ben appears; “France” results in the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris and “Jordan” in scenic views of Petra; but type in “Israel” and unsightly images of bombarded housed in Gaza, or the nuclear facility in the southern city of Dimona, pop up on the screen. Not exactly vacation hotspots.
In order to combat the PR impediment, the ministry, along with the Israeli Consulate General in New York, has decided it was time to fight back: The consulate has long been spearheading various innovative PR projects and now it stands to fly seven negotiators to Ramallah, including video and stills photographers, who will be tasked with capturing the country’s sweeping concessions and the ensuring peaceful relations, on film.
The project will see the mission photograph Israel’s withdrawl from the settlements, relocation of much of the security barrier to mutually-agreed paths, and the closing of the checkpoints; as well as shoot Israel’s beaches, parks, cafés etc.
The Foreign Ministry is also trying to organize an aerial tour of Israel for the mission, so it may have a bird’s-eye view of the country’s new, internationally-recognized borders.
The photos are to be loaded up to prominent websites the likes of Wikipedia, Wikimedia, Facebook, Twitter and Flickr, as well as be featured in several blogs.
The Foreign Ministry will maintain the copyrights to all photos, thus making them available for public use free of charge.
“We’ve protested Google allowing photos of bombarded Gaza to be included in search results about Israel, but it has made it clear that users can upload any photo they please and that it has no control over it,” said David Saranga, Consul for Media and Public Affairs at the Consulate General of Israel in New York, who initiated the mission.
“The fact of the matter is that Israeli surfers are rather indifferent, allowing the other side to dominate the web and upload its photos to harm the Israeli narrative. That’s why we have decided to send these experts to Palestine. We want to see the internet flooded with the true images of beautiful Israel, free for anyone to use.
“The last few years have made us realize that blogs and the new media have essentially become mainstream media and we hope this mission will help open a dynamic, user-friendly, accessible third-generation relationship to Israel.”

This is a parady of a real article from Ynet. Only the words in italics have been altered. Chag Purim sameach.

5 thoughts on “Israeli Foreign Ministry out to "conquer" bad image on internet

  1. One has to dig rather deep into Google Images to find shots of the devastation in Gaza or anything else disturbing when searching for “Israel” there, making this an excellent example of how Israeli government imagines up issues in avoidance of working to resolve this conflict.
    The parody was comedy though, for a moment was convinced I had been transported to Bizzaro World.

  2. Yeah, I wonder what search engines they’re using? I tried Google, Live and Yahoo and the vast majority of results both in web pages and images were factual information and things like maps. Only one of the three image searches brought up anything remotely political (the “hot chick” photos outnumbered the “Gaza devastation” photos in almost every search).

  3. The first hit for “Israel” on Google Image Search is a map of Israel that says “The West Bank and Gaza Strip are Israeli-occupied with current status subject to the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement — permanent status to be determined through further negotiation”. Maybe that’s what they have a problem with?

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