A campaign to stop X Factor winner Joe McElderry becoming Christmas number one is gathering pace, according to search figures.
Searches for Rage Against The Machine, the band behind 1992 hit Killing In The Name Of, are on the rise according to web-monitoring firm Hitwise.
The reason for the interest is largely due to an online campaign to get the single into the Christmas number one slot ahead of X Factor winner Joe McElderry.
A Facebook group was set up earlier this month to back the campaign and it now boasts more than 715,000 members.
A statement on the group's page reads: "Are you getting fed up about the possibility of another X-Factor Christmas No.1? Us too... so we're going to do something about it!"
Members of the group are instructed to buy the single before Saturday 19 December and the campaign seems to be having an impact, according to Hitwise.
"Searches for the term 'Rage Against The Machine' increased by almost 600 per cent last week, and actually picked up a slightly higher volume than 'Joe McElderry'," said Robin Goad of Hitwise.
Also, the track is currently at the top of the iTunes download chart. X-Factor supremo Simon Cowell has dismissed the campaign as "cynical".
McElderry, an 18-year-old from South Shields, was announced as the winner of this years' X Factor after beating Olly Murs in the final over the weekend.
Nearly 20 million people watched McElderry, hailed as the 'new Cliff Richard', take the title. X Factor winners have dominated the Christmas number one spot for the past five years.