Dude, you’re getting a battery recall: consumer advocacy in cyberspace

Bloggers and cyberjournalists are getting some credit for keeping the pressure on Dell to recall batteries that had the potential to catch fire.

This Business Week article traces how the blogosphere became a consumer advocacy network over several weeks this summer. It began on June 21, when the Inquirer, “a British ‘tabloid-style’ news site for techies, published a series of shocking photographs showing a Dell notebook computer in flames at a tech conference in Japan. The photos and an account of the incident came from ‘Gaston,’ the pseudonum of a loyal Inquirer reader who did not want to be identified because he’s in the computer business.”

The story grew legs and ran all over cyberspace.

“Industry analysts were soon e-mailing their take to mainstream reporters and investors,” Business Week reports. Soon, “Gadget news blogs like Gizmodo and Engadget spat out facts and rumors with equal zeal. They were relentless advocates for the consumer, too. On July 31, Engadget posted photos of a Dell notebook that had caught fire in Singapore. Its comment: ‘We’ll keep posting these until we see a recall or a solution, so please, Dell, treat ’em right.'”

The cybermedia didn’t merely expose the dangers of computers catching fire. They kept the heat on the manufacturers to do something about it and helped the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) conduct an investigation into the burning batteries.

Link via BuzzMachine.

Unknown's avatar

Author: andrewcareaga

Former higher ed PR and marketing guy at Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T) now focused on freelance writing and editing and creative writing, fiction and non-fiction.

Leave a comment

Discover more from Andy writes!

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading