People tend to think something is important if it’s secret,” says Michael Norton, a marketing professor at Harvard Business School. “Studies find that we give greater credence to information if we’ve been told it was once ‘classified.’
I once saw "sponsored link" ad that promised a "weird old investing trick that Obama doesn't want you to know about."
Upvoted for the WTF?!ness value...
The weirdest "one weird trick" I've ever saw claimed that 83% of the male population has a penis size smaller than the average.
How "one weird trick" conquered the Internet. Some excerpt I found interesting:
I actually see this technique used in a lot of religious apologetics. There's even a name for one of them: The Gish Gallop. Would it be fair to say that this technique is taking advantage of a naive or intuitive understanding of Bayesian updates?
The "click on your age" first gambit seems a bit like Cached Selves.
Humanity's love affair with secrecy and its importance seems to go back quite a bit. The world's largest religion seems to have started out as one of many mystery religions in the Greco-Roman world at the time.