Though the popularity of online auctions has brought the term shill under the mainstream radar, the word itself has been around for many decades, comfortably pre-dating the Internet and everyday use of computers. Shill dates back to 1914 and is thought to be a shortened form of the earlier term shillaber. Its original use was to describe a person who acted as a swindler’s accomplice by reacting in an enthusiastic way in order to encourage others, often as an audience member at a carnival in order to elicit interest in an attraction. Over time the word began to be applied in a variety of contexts. For example in marketing, a shill is a person who gives the impression that they are a satisfied independent customer of someone they’re in fact secretly working for. In gambling scenarios, a shill is someone employed as a player who keeps games going when there aren’t enough players, or makes winning appear more likely than it actually is.