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The Politics of E-Mail

by Dana Blankenhorn
June 13, 2006
in energy, Internet, politics, spam, Web/Tech
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SpamanmNothing illustrates better the disconnect between Washington and the wired world than issues involving e-mail.

It’s not just Congress which is willfully ignorant. The lobbies and even the so-called  “public interest” people are either dim or playing games at our expense.

The problems lie on both the sending and receiving side:

  • Congress has been careful to exempt itself, and political campaigns, from anti-spam laws.
  • Congress has been placing increasingly high hurdles in front of citizens who want to e-mail folks.

Notice the contradiction. They can spam you, but you have to fill out math problems to e-mail them. They want to protect themselves from “Astroturf,” sponsored by corporations, unions, issue groups or the organized blogocracy, while at the same time they seem to think that political spam is going to  influence how you vote.

Spam will impact how people vote. It already has. Those politicians who spam lose. This doesn’t seem to get through their skulls.

Issue groups, even those who claim to stand for “good government,” show the same asymetry:

  • They are furious that Congress is frustrating their efforts to organize e-mail campaigns.
  • They think money will determine the outcome of Internet campaigns.

AstroturfThis idiocy extends even to the media, which equates posting something with having an audience.

It’s asymetry and self-interest which are at work. We want to organize e-mail campaigns aimed at Congress, but we don’t want to extend this right to others. We want to be free of spam ourselves. but don’t want Congress to be free of our organized e-mail. Congress wants to filter e-mail, but thinks somehow its spam will be effective.

It’s all nonsense. Congress needs to know when there is genuine concern about an issue. It has a right to distinguish between Astroturf and real grassroots. Congress also needs to understand that we have as much a right to choose how we filter our e-mail as they do, and that both their spamming, as well as that of their opponents, or the interests they attach to, simply won’t work.

How then, do you do political prospecting, and how should Congress react to the e-mail flood?

  1. Ads need to point to information.
  2. Blogs need to engage as real conversations.
  3. All lists must be opt-in to be useful.
  4. Filtering should follow the sending of e-mail, not precede it.

Here’s what politicians need to understand about the Internet. You can’t fake it. Astroturf no longer works, fake blogs don’t work, ads which lead to corporate sites can be seen-through, and the cost of campaigning in the Internet age will decline, if we allow the Internet to evolve as it should.

Tags: Congress e-mailCongress spame-maile-mail politicsInternet politicspolitical spampolitical tacticspolitics
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    Even though it is only peripherally related, I think CBS’ appeal of recent FCC fines on the basis that the complaints came from special interest groups and not individuals will have a bearing on this issue. Thanks to IT it is easy enough for a small group to generate millions of letters (even of the physical kind). New paradigms have to arise to handle this sort of thing.

    Reply
  2. Jesse Kopelman says:
    19 years ago

    Even though it is only peripherally related, I think CBS’ appeal of recent FCC fines on the basis that the complaints came from special interest groups and not individuals will have a bearing on this issue. Thanks to IT it is easy enough for a small group to generate millions of letters (even of the physical kind). New paradigms have to arise to handle this sort of thing.

    Reply

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