Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
#31
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
I think we can file this under being extremely lucky. It's a "wow, I'm glad that worked out for the best, let's NEVER do that again" type of situation. As much as I liked seeing the pics, I have to side with Scott and GM. But mainly because I have a pretty good stake in GM. My dad's worked there for my entire life and will retire shortly. Anything good for GM is good for my family.
Sorry Scott, I can't be as supportive of Toyota. If someone leaked a pic of their hot new car and it caused Toyota to go bankrupt, I wouldn't even bat an eye. I don't like Toyota, feel they are at best a misleading company, and could care less about them (no apologies, my own reasons).
Sorry Scott, I can't be as supportive of Toyota. If someone leaked a pic of their hot new car and it caused Toyota to go bankrupt, I wouldn't even bat an eye. I don't like Toyota, feel they are at best a misleading company, and could care less about them (no apologies, my own reasons).
#32
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by CLEAN
Because people liked the damn thing! It got them talking about how great it looked, and just jacked up the anticipation even more. Go back and read the posts!
Last edited by Z28Wilson; 02-14-2006 at 12:37 PM.
#33
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by RoMaD
I think we can file this under being extremely lucky. It's a "wow, I'm glad that worked out for the best, let's NEVER do that again" type of situation. As much as I liked seeing the pics, I have to side with Scott and GM.
GM themselves showed the video w/ those same concept pictures, and the clays, and the building of the concpet the night before the show, so I guess they weren't above letting out a little tease. Maybe they felt like they had nothing to lose, I don't know.
My point is...leaks=bad, but the fact is EVERY GM car gets leaked before GM wants it too. It's a shame, but it's true. It's nice that this PARTICULAR car didn't appear to suffer for it, but that doesn't make it ok. Not sure how much clearer I can be.
#34
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by Caps94ZODG
all I can say at least it was the right leaked pictures and not the "other" concept that looked to 1969ish..
#35
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Who gives a crap who was excited when it was unveiled or 2 weeks before.
Are you still going to be excited in ~3 years when it comes out?
If you lost your excitement between the time you saw the leaked photos and the time you saw it unveiled there's no real chance your going to be excited in 3 years about it, so who really cares in the long run.
Are you still going to be excited in ~3 years when it comes out?
If you lost your excitement between the time you saw the leaked photos and the time you saw it unveiled there's no real chance your going to be excited in 3 years about it, so who really cares in the long run.
#36
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by 5thgen69camaro
I cant believe Im saying this. What if the early 69ish pics which wasnt finished either btw were leaked and everyone hated it?
#37
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by JasonD
Furthermore and more importantly to this site, when GM tells us that they don't want us to allow their property on this site, we have no desire to be defiant. The legal issues if they were to be enacted wouldn't stop at the time that the car was unveiled.
The word “ethics” was brought up a number of times. What if these were totally legal spy pics taken by someone over a fence on public property? Would the same “ethical” duty to not post them apply? If so, what about all the spy pictures posted in the car mags, are they all in the wrong too?
As to the concern voiced that people might see the leaked shots and decide right then and there to swear off ever buying one … I think that would be a rare circumstance. First, only a small percentage of the North American population will actually see the concept in the flesh, everyone else will just see pictures. So to say that you must see it in person to like it, well, you’ve automatically narrowed down your audience considerably. Second, if a person is able to make their mind up based solely on pictures and disliked the leak, then they should likewise be capable of appreciating it again if subsequent pictures of the actual concept were much better. For the record I liked the “real” pictures better than the leaked ones (it’d be hard not to), but seeing the actual car didn’t change my opinion any further. I’ve grown to accept the design over time after my initial disappointment at it being retro, although I don’t attribute that to seeing it in person. It’s probably more of a familiarity thing because of seeing the pictures almost every day.
#38
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by Fbodfather
It's very easy to make declarations when you have nothing at stake.
In my mind, this comes down to 'right versus wrong.'
Let me ask you something. If you found a wallet on the street, what would you do?
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
The right answer is "you would return it with its contents......and if you did not know who it belonged to, you would return it to the police."
In my mind, this comes down to 'right versus wrong.'
Let me ask you something. If you found a wallet on the street, what would you do?
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
The right answer is "you would return it with its contents......and if you did not know who it belonged to, you would return it to the police."
Scott, you know you are one of my favorite people in the world...but there is something missing here.
This is not a case of GM accidently "dropping it's wallet" once...but repeatedly. To me, this is largley an internal control/ethics issue at GM...not the internet. Just look at the last three leaks. The Z06 pictures were apparently leaked by a GM employee (from what went around the net). The Tahoe and Escalade were leaked when someone was allowed to have a camera phone at press picture shoot. And lastly, the Camaro pictures were leaked by someone GM had enthrusted with them. These are not cases of websites breaking embargoes, or stealing anything. These are cases where GM is giving their wallet to employees, whom are then driving around town throwing money out the window all over the place.
My point is....how many times can you "drop your wallet" and expect the guy who finds it to do the right thing? Once it is on the net, it is almost impossible to stop these damn pictures from spreading. By the time you delete and explain to someone why images cannot be posted...some other random person has seen the pictures and posted them all over the net. I was threatening to ban people if they posted them, and still had people posting them for weeks afterwards. Complicating the issue further, are situations like when Dodge intentionally leaked Challenger pictures. Now everyone has to kind of double take, and wait for confirmation from the company that these images are not supposed to be posted.
I personally hate when pictures like the Camaro ones get leaked because it is a pain in the *** deleting threads and getting people to stop reposting them. It is really a lot of work...and it makes members angry because they don't understand why we are removing something newsworthy. Websites like this, GMI and C&G are GM's biggest bases of enthusiasim on the internet. Prospective buyers check out our sites for info on GM product just as much as they do any print mag...probaly more. Yet, even though we remove the images and have not broken any embargoes, GM still wants to come down on websites and act like we do not exist because we may be a risk.
Last edited by formula79; 02-14-2006 at 06:37 PM.
#39
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by R377
I’m not denying the legalities involved here. I fully understand these are GM’s pictures and they have a right to protect their property. That wasn’t even what I was questioning; I was questioning the other justifications some posters had given for not showing the pictures.
The word “ethics” was brought up a number of times. What if these were totally legal spy pics taken by someone over a fence on public property? Would the same “ethical” duty to not post them apply?
The images in question were never meant to be seen by the public's eyes. They were never meant to leave the GM design center, in fact. There are probably hundreds more like it that didn't make the light of day, and possibly never will.
If so, what about all the spy pictures posted in the car mags, are they all in the wrong too?
Once agian, it comes down to right and wrong. I had images of the car LONG before they got leaked. I didn't ask for them, but I received them and even I shouldn't have. But when I got them, I could have sold them to the highest bidders, paid off my car and then some, splashed them across the front page of my site and got famous for a day...but I knew that would be wrong to do. I know right from wrong, and I govern myself according to that.
If whoever took those images and leaked them had done the same, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
#40
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by formula79
This is not a case of GM accidently "dropping it's wallet" once...but repeatedly. To me, this is largley an internal control/ethics issue at GM...not the internet.
My point is....how many times can you "drop your wallet" and expect the guy who finds it to do the right thing?
I think this sort of thing actually happened a couple of times recently.
Once it is on the net, it is almost impossible to stop these damn pictures from spreading. By the time you delete and explain to someone why images cannot be posted...some other random person has seen the pictures and posted them all over the net.
I personally hate when pictures like the Camaro ones get leaked because it is a pain in the *** deleting threads and getting people to stop reposting them. It is really a lot of work...and it makes members angry because they don't understand why we are removing something newsworthy.
Websites like this, GMI and C&G are GM's biggest bases of enthusiasim on the internet. Prospective buyers check out our sites for info on GM product just as much as they do any print mag...probaly more.
GM still wants to come down on websites and act like we do not exist because we may be a risk.
#41
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by R377
I’m not denying the legalities involved here. I fully understand these are GM’s pictures and they have a right to protect their property. That wasn’t even what I was questioning; I was questioning the other justifications some posters had given for not showing the pictures.
The word “ethics” was brought up a number of times. What if these were totally legal spy pics taken by someone over a fence on public property? Would the same “ethical” duty to not post them apply? If so, what about all the spy pictures posted in the car mags, are they all in the wrong too?
As to the concern voiced that people might see the leaked shots and decide right then and there to swear off ever buying one … I think that would be a rare circumstance. First, only a small percentage of the North American population will actually see the concept in the flesh, everyone else will just see pictures. So to say that you must see it in person to like it, well, you’ve automatically narrowed down your audience considerably. Second, if a person is able to make their mind up based solely on pictures and disliked the leak, then they should likewise be capable of appreciating it again if subsequent pictures of the actual concept were much better. For the record I liked the “real” pictures better than the leaked ones (it’d be hard not to), but seeing the actual car didn’t change my opinion any further. I’ve grown to accept the design over time after my initial disappointment at it being retro, although I don’t attribute that to seeing it in person. It’s probably more of a familiarity thing because of seeing the pictures almost every day.
The word “ethics” was brought up a number of times. What if these were totally legal spy pics taken by someone over a fence on public property? Would the same “ethical” duty to not post them apply? If so, what about all the spy pictures posted in the car mags, are they all in the wrong too?
As to the concern voiced that people might see the leaked shots and decide right then and there to swear off ever buying one … I think that would be a rare circumstance. First, only a small percentage of the North American population will actually see the concept in the flesh, everyone else will just see pictures. So to say that you must see it in person to like it, well, you’ve automatically narrowed down your audience considerably. Second, if a person is able to make their mind up based solely on pictures and disliked the leak, then they should likewise be capable of appreciating it again if subsequent pictures of the actual concept were much better. For the record I liked the “real” pictures better than the leaked ones (it’d be hard not to), but seeing the actual car didn’t change my opinion any further. I’ve grown to accept the design over time after my initial disappointment at it being retro, although I don’t attribute that to seeing it in person. It’s probably more of a familiarity thing because of seeing the pictures almost every day.
Hope fully the release of the concept made those same people change their minds that didnt like the leaked photos. That is to say as much of them as it would have had they not seen the unfinished design mule.
Legal spy pics would be a different story. If they had hoped a fence that would be trespassing. The ones that are caught in road testing or sitting out. Most are like the controlled leaked pic of the finished Challenger next to a tree or a car in camo or unrelated existing cars as Mules testing the drive train. Had GM left this design mule outside while someone else took the photo without climbing onto their property, I dont think it would be an ethical issue.
Thats my take anyway, I could be wrong...
Last edited by 5thgen69camaro; 02-14-2006 at 07:40 PM.
#42
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by JasonD
Could it be because I asked them not to (here) and they respected that? I am not sure if that is the answer you are looking for. That's what I can think of unless you are getting at something else.
...
Now you are talking about two different things. They weren't legal "spy pics". They were illegally stolen documents, and there is no two ways about it. They weren't on public property, and were never meant to be. Spy pics "in the wild" are different, and the auto makers know it as well as every professional automotive photographer.
...
Now you are talking about two different things. They weren't legal "spy pics". They were illegally stolen documents, and there is no two ways about it. They weren't on public property, and were never meant to be. Spy pics "in the wild" are different, and the auto makers know it as well as every professional automotive photographer.
I just didn't understand the people trying to defend GM's position based on these arguments.
#43
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by JasonD
If an employee of your credit card company takes your credit card numbers and posts them...do you hope people do the right thing? I sure would. I think this sort of thing actually happened a couple of times recently.
There I have to disagree, because no one "came down" on this site. I don't know about yours, but I was simply asked to remove them. I don't need to be asked twice.
In general, GM communications is pretty unwilling to communicate though unless you happen to be from one of the major mags.
#44
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Please listen to our Podcast interview with Scott Settlemire, this may clear somethings up. Podcast 18 Interview
Thanks for the great Podcast....11 minutes of fun!
#45
Re: Looking back on the leaked pictures of the concept …
Originally Posted by NoRegrets78
Personally, I think the "leak" was staged to build hype for the release...not like any company hasn't done that before.
It's all about effective marketing...and the "leak" definately boosted interest in the days before the show.
Another theory, is the leak happened in enough time to make subtle changes. GM could have leaked the pics to see reactions, what people like what they didn't like and make the subtle changes before the actual launch.
There was two diff front bumpers on the leaked car after all...
Again, my theories, by no means do I have evidence to back it up...just makes sense in my own little world.
It's all about effective marketing...and the "leak" definately boosted interest in the days before the show.
Another theory, is the leak happened in enough time to make subtle changes. GM could have leaked the pics to see reactions, what people like what they didn't like and make the subtle changes before the actual launch.
There was two diff front bumpers on the leaked car after all...
Again, my theories, by no means do I have evidence to back it up...just makes sense in my own little world.
Go get the family Bible...and write in it: "It was NOT a leak"........
If it were, I'd probably be winking as I type this.
I'm not winking.