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Auckland University is seeking legal advice, after a bogus online 鈥渕iracle-cure鈥 scam used fake quotes from former Director-General of Health Ashley Bloomfield to sell sham health products.
The ad for 鈥淏lood Balance鈥 capsules by a company using the name 鈥淕uardian Botanicals鈥 led to a mock article, featuring an alleged 鈥渆xclusive鈥 interview with Sir Ashley 鈥 in which he calls hypertension a 鈥渄octors鈥 fairly-tale鈥 for which people 鈥減ay with money and health鈥.
Quotes attributed to Bloomfield - who is a Professor in the School of Population Health at the University of Auckland - claimed the pill will 鈥渃lean up and tone blood vessels, causing almost all chronic and incurable diseases to go away鈥.
Those promised results have been rubbished by General Practice New Zealand chair Dr Bryan Betty, who dubbed it a 鈥渢otal fabrication鈥.
鈥淚 think someone like Ashley has a high public profile. He鈥檚 a trusted name in the media and trusted over what happened with Covid, therefore scammers are looking to take those public personas and attach them to fake products.鈥
A University of Auckland spokesperson said they鈥檙e concerned such an obviously fake advert ran on the website of a major media channel.
鈥淒r Ashley Bloomfield has no connection to the product or company advertised and did not take part in an interview as claimed in the advertisement.鈥
They said Bloomfield鈥檚 name and image have been used without his knowledge or approval.
鈥淲e are referring this matter to our legal office for advice on what the University can do when an academic鈥檚 reputation is misrepresented by the use of fake images and quotes.鈥
The ad ran on Stuff, but 鈥 after being alerted to its presence by 九一星空无限talk ZB 鈥 a spokesperson for the news site said the fake ad, masquerading as an article, has been removed.
鈥淪tuff works with third-party advertising networks that buy and sell advertising using automated methods. This enables advertisers to book and place ads across a variety of sites at any one time.鈥
Director of Digital Revenue and Strategy John Buckley said it appears 鈥渂ad actors鈥 used a sophisticated method to bypass Stuff鈥檚 website rules, similar to how an email may bypass a spam filter.
鈥淎s technology evolves, so too do the tactics used by these sorts of advertisers to bypass publishers鈥 rules,鈥 Buckley said.
He said Stuff does not approve of the advertisement, and is working with Google to get it blocked at the source 鈥 to stop the advertisement from appearing across other websites.
It鈥檚 not the first time a notable figure has been impersonated in a dubious advert.
Just last week, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon was targeted by digital creators depicting him announcing his 鈥渇avourite鈥 pornography sites online.
The banner, which imitated the customary National Party blue and used a photograph of Luxon, appeared on popular pornographic website Pornhub.
The University said the interview and advertisement which used Bloomfield鈥檚 likeness is an obvious fake and full of basic errors.
鈥淭he product has been identified as a known scam and people should not purchase products through the link.鈥
The litany of errors include calling Bloomfield New Zealand鈥檚 鈥淐hief Medical Officer鈥 and director of the 鈥淧ublic Health Communication Centre鈥 鈥 positions he has never held.
GPNZ鈥檚 Dr Betty said health professionals are seeing an increase in scams which feature prominent doctors.
鈥淚t鈥檚 gravely concerning,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t has happened to me personally. Patients are more likely to give validity to the [products] claims, because you are well known.
鈥淚 would not be going for one of these products unless you鈥檝e spoken with your doctor. They are potentially dangerous.鈥
Demelza Jackson is a political reporter, based at Parliament in Wellington. She joined 九一星空无限talk ZB in 2019 and specialised in climate and environment issues, before moving to the Press Gallery in 2023.
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