Dictionary Definition
shill n : a decoy who acts as an enthusiastic
customer in order to stimulate the participation of others v : act
as a shill; "The shill bid for the expensive carpet during the
auction in order to drive the price up"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Origin uncertain; perhaps an abbreviation of the Yiddish shillaber. The word originally denoted a carnival worker who pretends to be a member of the audience in an attempt to elicit interest in an attractionPronunciation
- /ʃɪl/
Verb
- To promote as a fan or customer.
- To put under cover; to sheal.
Noun
Quotations
- "Witnesses have testified that Jim Jones (like a few other professional faith-healers) used shills part of the time...." - Robert Anton Wilson, Prometheus Rising, 1983
- "The pitchman swept his cane in a slow acceleration over the heads of the crowd and then suddenly pointed the silver cap toward Billy and the shill." - Cormac McCarthy, The Crossing, 1994
- "Today there are even commercials in which real scientists, some of considerable distinction, shill for corporations. They teach that scientists too will lie for money. As Tom Paine warned, inuring us to lies lays the groundwork for many other evils." - Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World, 1996
Translations
an accomplice at a confidence trick
- German: Lockvogel
Extensive Definition
A shill is an associate of a person selling goods
or services or a political group, who pretends no association to
the seller/group and assumes the air of an enthusiastic customer.
The intention of the shill is, using crowd
psychology, to encourage others unaware of the set-up to
purchase said goods or services or support the political group's
ideological claims. Shills are often employed by confidence
artists. In the UK the term plant is also used.
Shilling is illegal in many circumstances and in
many jurisdictions because of the frequently fraudulent and
damaging character of their actions. However, if a shill does not
place uninformed parties at a risk of loss, but merely generates
"buzz", the shill's actions may be legal. For example, a person
planted in an audience to laugh and applaud when appropriate (see
"claque") or to
participate in on-stage activities as a "random member of the
audience", is a type of legal shill.
"Shill" can also be used pejoratively to describe
a critic who appears either all-too-eager to heap glowing praise
upon mediocre offerings, or who acts as an apologist for glaring flaws.
In this sense, they would be an implicit "shill" for the industry
at large, as their income is tied to its prosperity.
Shills in gambling
Both the illegal and legal gambling industries often use
shills to make winning at games appear more likely than it actually
is. For example, illegal Three-card
Monte peddlers are notorious employers of shills. These shills
also often aid in cheating, disrupting the game if the mark is
likely to win.
In a legal casino, however, a shill is sometimes
a gambler who plays using the casino's money in order to keep games
(especially poker) going when there are not enough players. (This
is different from a
proposition player who is paid a salary by the casino for the
same purpose, but bets with their own money.)
Shills on the Internet
In online discussion media, satisfied consumers,
or "innocent" parties may express specific opinions in order to
further the interests of an organization in which they have an
interest, such as a commercial vendor or special-interest
group. Websites may also
be set up for the same purpose. For example, an employee of a
company that produces a specific product may praise the product
anonymously in a discussion forum or group in order to generate
interest in that product, service, or group.
In some jurisdictions and
circumstances, this type of activity may be illegal. In addition,
reputable organizations may prohibit their employees and other
interested parties (contractors, agents, etc.) from participating
in public forums or discussion groups in which a conflict
of interest might arise, or will at least insist that their
employees and agents refrain from participating in any way that
might create a conflict of interest.
Shills in marketing
In marketing, shills are often employed to assume
the air of satisfied customers and give testimonials to the merits of
a given product. This type of shilling is illegal in some
jurisdictions and almost impossible to detect. It may be considered
a form of unjust
enrichment or unfair
competition, as in California's
Business & Professions Code § 17200, which prohibits
"unfair or fraudulent business act[s] or practice[s] and unfair,
deceptive, untrue or misleading advertising".
Shills in auctions
Shills, or "potted plants", are sometimes
employed in auctions. Driving prices up with phony bids, they seek
to provoke a bidding war
among other participants. Often they are told by the seller
precisely how high to bid, as the seller actually pays the price
(to himself, of course) if the item does not sell, losing only the
auction fees.
Shilling has a substantially higher rate of
occurrence in online
auctions, where any user with multiple accounts (and IP addresses)
can shill without aid of participants. Many online auction sites
employ sophisticated (and usually secret) methods to detect
collusion, and a
number of people have been sent to jail for online auction fraud in
the past decade.
Shill bidding may be a common practice on
eBay. In his
book
Fake: Forgery, Lies, & eBay, Kenneth
Walton describes how he and his cohorts placed shill bids on
hundreds of eBay auctions over the course of a year. While many
sellers consider shill bidding a harmless act, some believe that it
may violate federal or state laws. Walton and his associates were
charged and convicted of fraud by the United States Attorney for
their eBay shill bidding. Some eBay sellers frown on the practice
and a few spend considerable time trying to "out" those among them
that use shill bidders as well as working to increase public
knowledge of how to protect themselves from said shilling. Their
tactics can easily turn up many "false positives" — for instance,
they believe that auctions having many bidders with very low (less
than 20 or so) and/or no feedback could be suspect.
Shills in journalism
The term is applied metaphorically to journalists
or commentators who have vested interests in or associations with
parties in a controversial issue. Usually this takes the form of a
show or network pretending to be offering news when in fact they
are simply repeating "talking points" offered by a political
party.
In addition, there have been some notorious news
conferences, such as the U.S.
Federal Emergency Management Agency conference in which agency
staffers posed as news reporters. Shill reporters have also been
used in White House briefings.
Journalistic
ethics require full disclosure of conflicts
of interest, and of any interference by other parties with the
reportage.
In interrogations
Plants can be used by police or military
interrogators to aid interrogation. The plant can pose as a fellow
inmate or internee and build a rapport and earns the confidence of
the interviewee. The plant may subtly suggest that telling the
interrogators what they want to know is the sensible or right thing
to do. Even if no outright confessions are obtained, minor details
and discrepancies that come out in supposedly innocent conversation
can be used to chip away at the interviewee. Some plants are in
reality inmates or prisoners
of war that have been promised better treatment and conditions
in return for helping with the interrogation.
One notorious UK case is that of Colin Stagg
accused of the murder of Rachel
Nickell, in which a policewoman posed as a potential love
interest to try and tempt Stagg to implicate himself.
External links
- "I'm evil" internet shill job role article
- "Strange bedfellows: Journalists as corporate shills"
- Mainstream Media Shills For NATO
- Confessions of a Government Shill | By Andy Borrowitz
- Corporate Shill Enterprise: A Corporate Lobbying Front Group
- American Media: Government Shills?
- Some American journalists accused of being spokespeople for the administration
- The Hazards of Online Auctions
- Internet Shills: Old Trick, New Tech
- EBay's policy
shill in German: Shill
shill in Japanese: サクラ (おとり)