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Counterfeit Campaign

kjb/tt/dpa/apMarch 22, 2009

What will the world be like a year from now? Left-wing activist group Attac publicized their ideas by printing realistic-looking copies of a prominent German newspaper -- dated May 1, 2010.

https://p.dw.com/p/HHAX
Attac's fake newspaper next to an original edition of the German weekly 'Die Zeit'
Attac distributed their version of "Die Zeit" (right) across GermanyImage: picture-alliance/ dpa

Attac activists distributed 150,000 copies of their faked, eight-page version of the German weekly Die Zeit in over 90 cities across the country.

With the top headline "At the end of the tunnel," the paper presented reports the group said it thinks can become reality within 13 months.

Today's news about the global financial crisis, world hunger and climate change leave a lot of people feeling helpless, said Attac member Jutta Sundermann.

"We fast forwarded time and wrote about the news we want to read about tomorrow -- not about some distant paradise, but about concrete changes that are conceivable and attainable," she added.

Articles describe the beginning of a "new era," where banks have been nationalized, the Group of 20 industrialized and emerging countries see eye to eye, and polluters are taken to task.

Detailed print and online imitations

Giovanni die Lorenzo
Die Zeit editor-in-chief, Giovanni di Lorenzo, will not be pressing chargesImage: picture-alliance/ ZB

Attac mimicked the weekly newspaper's format down to the last detail, though the final version was a bit smaller. They also recreated an equally detailed online version.

Die Zeit said it would not take legal action against the group.

"Naturally, we can never endorse an imitation of Die Zeit in print or online, particularly not in quality as good as this," said the paper's editor-in-chief, Giovanni di Lorenzo. "But it's not surprising that Attac chose Die Zeit for this campaign, as it's the largest national newspaper of quality."

The paper has a circulation of over half a million.

In a similar campaign, the American activist group Yes-Men published a false version of The New York Times.