
Vanish, a combination of a manhunt and an experiment, began at 5.38pm on August 14, 2009 as a bold headline on Wired proclaimed “Author Evan Ratliff Is on the Lam. Locate Him and Win $US5000.” We would discover if someone could disappear in today’s world, or whether the electronic trails from ATM, email and mobile phone usage would give him away.
Of course, in Evan’s case it wasn’t just a few concerned family members or police officers looking. It was any person on the internet whose curiosity was aroused, either by the sheer challenge or by the bounty. Any and all traceable information would be shared over the next few weeks. Soon Evan’s phone records, credit card statements, IP dumps, interviews with friends, and anything that his hunters could dig up would be posted on Twitter, Facebook and Wired‘s own site.
The end goal for the hunters was to locate Evan, photograph him after giving the codeword “fluke”, and then submitting that photo along with a codeword Evan would provide to Wired. And after 27 long days, someone did just that. Evan was caught.
You can read the entire tale here. As you do, consider whether Evan made any genuine mistakes or whether his capture was simply inevitable. Is there a way to disappear without giving up travel and technology? How would you do it? [Wired]


















Stefan
Saturday, November 21, 2009 at 11:02 PMwow… thats a fantastic competition!
Sounds like heaps of fun xD
James Golfis
Sunday, November 22, 2009 at 12:10 AMRead the entire article, quite witty on both ends (hider/seekers). I just wonder if the methods of obtaining that information really are “legal”?
John Kirkham
Sunday, November 22, 2009 at 12:46 PMCouldn’t do this in Oz. The septic’s have pretty lax privacy laws.