Bill Jones Doesn't Get It – Thinks Spam Was A Good Idea
from the well,-there's-a-brilliant-politician dept
We discussed last month the idiocy of California gubenatorial candidate Bill Jones sending out spam to try to get votes. The San Jose Mercury News now has a very scary article about this where a number of Jones’ campaign people suggest they have absolutely no regrets about spamming. If you don’t recall, they sent out a true spam message, sent through an open relay at an elementary school in Korea – and sent to tons of people who don’t even live in California. It angered a ton of people. Especially for someone running in a tech-savvy state like California, you would think that someone on the campaign staff would have a clue. Instead, they say that it was an “innovative” way to reach voters, and that the “small number of complaints” was outweighed by the ability to piss off completely random people in Russia. They’re also angry at their ISP that shut down the website in the days before the primary because they broke their acceptable use policy by spamming. The campaign is actually thinking of suing the ISP. These people have no clue what a mistake they’ve made. What’s scary is that I’m sure there are plenty of other political candidates who are even more clueless. This may make voting in elections easier, though, as you can immediately eliminate a candidate stupid enough to spam voters.
Comments on “Bill Jones Doesn't Get It – Thinks Spam Was A Good Idea”
Lawbreaker?
Doesn’t California have an anti-spamming law? If so, he obviously broke it.
Re: Lawbreaker?
Apparently, most people are saying that since his spam wasn’t “commercial” in nature it probably did not break the California spam laws.
A Small Problem
This practice will not become part of mainstream politics, since it won’t take long until every political consultant with half a clue realizes that each spam mailing costs their candidate votes.
Of course, there’s no shortage of fringe or wacko candidates for public office, and I think that spam might appeal to a lot of them. But then I’d expect the mainstream politicians to pass enough restrictions and limitations on political spam to make the problem go away.
Re: A Small Problem
This practice will not become part of mainstream politics, since it won’t take long until every political consultant with half a clue realizes that each spam mailing costs their candidate votes.
Yeah, that’s what I was thinking too. The only thing that scares me is that Jones isn’t a wacko candidate – and despite all the attention and anger (and there was a ton) he and his political consultants still don’t think it was a bad idea. So, I’m not completely convinced that politicians will realize that this sort of stupidity costs them votes.
Re: Re: A Small Problem
He’s somebody who came in third in a primary, which does make him a fringe/wacko candidate in the eyes of the political machine.