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Obama's Web Site Hacked, Takes You to Clinton's Page


Barack Obama's Web site was hacked sometime just before the Pennsylvania primaries, showing that even a presidential candidate's Web site isn't safe from those looking to have a little digital fun.

The attack redirected certain links on the Obama Web site to the Hillary Clinton campaign site. The "cross-site scripting" code, which automatically sends users from one Web site to another, was inserted through a vulnerability in the "community blogs" section.

The links have been fixed, and the security hole has been reportedly closed, but we're sure to see more of these as the presidential race drags on... and on... and on. [Source: Newsvine]

'Net Phenom Obama Girl Didn't Vote for Obama


That up there is Obama Girl, the Internet phenomenon who declared that she had a "Crush on Obama." But what's this? Obama Girl did not cast her vote for Obama during Super Tuesday. She didn't switch sides, she simply shirked her civic duty and didn't vote at all. Her reason? She "was in Arizona for the Super Bowl -- every time I get in the airplane I get sick."

Allow us to say that is the lamest excuse ever. Shame on you, Obama Girl.

From Valleywag

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Texting For Turnout On Super Tuesday

Texting the Obama campaign.

The Obama campaign has been reaching out to younger voters during the lead-up to Super Tuesday by telling them to text "HOPE to 62262" to learn more about how to participate in caucuses.

The traditional way to get the message out -- especially in caucus states, where every person who shows up at a caucus site can have much greater impact than someone voting in a primary -- is through targeted mailings and phone calls. But this texting message is going out over the radio airwaves via stations geared toward younger listeners. The radio ad details the date and time of the caucuses.

Those who send the text message get a response asking for their zip code, which is used to provide local information to the voter.

Since the message is going out over the radio, it could inspire people who support other candidates to go to the caucuses, but Obama's people seem to believe that the greater the turnout the more support he'll receive.

(Are you still undecided? Try glassbooth.org to see how your views line up with the candidates'.)

Does this call for texting work? According to a study by the University of Michigan and Princeton University, text messages to newly registered voters increased the likelihood of voting by 4.2 percentage points.

From the Wall Street Journal.

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Barack Obama Joins LinkedIn

Obama Joins LinkedIn
In his quest to leave no social-networking stone unturned, Barack Obama has joined the professional networking service LinkedIn.

LinkedIn is a business-oriented social networking site that allows you to do many of the standard social networking things such as send messages, connect with your friends, and create profiles, but instead of listing the bands you like and fending off requests from porn bots and jail bait, you are asked to fill in your education and past employment information. It's essentially an online resume service with the added bonus that former and current employers can endorse you.

Interestingly, you can't even upload a picture or tweak with the overall format of your page, but that's not what LinkedIn is about, anyway. It's really about networking on a professional level. The site has been around for a couple of years, but for some reason it's taking off lately -- we're getting about four or five requests to link with business acquaintances every day.

If his MySpace and Facebook friends lists are any indication, Obama seems to already have a lock on the young and Web-connected crowd. But now he seems to be selling himself to an older and more established professional crowd -- after all, the average age of users on LinkedIn is 29, which is slightly older than the average Edwards or Clinton fan.

As of this post, Obama only had a couple hundred contacts on his LinkedIn profile, which is a relatively barebones resume of his work history and goals for the presidency, but we imagine it'll grow with time, if LinkedIn's current popularity is any sign.

From Tech Digest

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How Presidential Candidates Are Using the 'Net



This election cycle is becoming the year politics go super-digital. Take a quick look at any of the candidates' websites -- each one reveals a host of buttons linking to the various candidates' digital outposts on various social Web services. Each site has a blog, a MySpace page, and a YouTube channel. Each one also provides tools to help supporters organize.

This is not just the result of the growing popularity of online services and the success of the Dean revolution from 2004, masterminded by Joe Trippi, but a necessity of the compacted primary season. Candidates can't be everywhere at once, especially those who still have day jobs as Senators and Governors. With 23 states holding their primaries or caucuses by February 5th -- representing slightly less than half the delegates -- a strong online presence and enthusiastic grassroots organization is essential to staying in the race.

We've taken a quick look at what the major players in the race are doing and how they stack up against each other.



Hillary Clinton


Hillary is probably the least tech savvy of the major Democrats in the race. She has the requisite MySpace and Facebook (26,000+ friends) pages, a YouTube and Flickr channel, and has even unveiled a text-messaging initiative not too long ago. Hillary's attempts so far, however, seem too safe, the old guard adopting the new media without understanding how it works.

Her text-messaging service seems to be primarily a way to put out announcements while her MySpace page forgets that the social web is about being, well... social. She is well on her way to 123,000 friends, but Clinton's top 15 are all photos or logos of her and her campaign. There isn't a single regular supporter in sight, and the content is written in the third person, betraying what we all know anyway -- that Hillary didn't write this. The same goes for Clinton's YouTube channel, where clips you see are primarily things like her quip from the last debates about sending Dick Cheney to other countries "hardly being diplomatic." It screams "look at me! Aren't I funny!?!?," which misses the whole point.

Her one experiment that sort of succeeded was an opportunity for Hillary supporters to choose her official campaign song. People logged on and voted for their choice. The winner was revealed through a video with hubby and ex-pres Bill that spoofs the ending of the Sopranos.

The Battle Over ObamaSpace

 Barack Obama MySpace Banner
If you're both politically minded and MySpace obsessed, you may have noticed that presidential hopeful Barack Obama suddenly has fewer friends than he had a few days ago. What's going on? Until very recently, the page that sits at www.myspace.com/barackobama wasn't directly connected to Obama. After the 2004 Democratic National Convention keynote, volunteer Joseph Anthony of Los Angeles took it upon himself to put together a profile of the then future U.S. Senator. Since then, Anthony had spent a couple of hours each day accepting friend requests, answering e-mails and sprucing up the unofficial Obama page.

By the time Obama's run for the White House kicked off, Anthony's page had tens of thousands friends (not to mention the highly desirable 'www.myspace.com/barackobama' address). Rather than start from scratch, Camp Obama simply threw its lot in with Anthony's. And when MySpace launched its politically-themed Impact Channel to feature each of the candidates' official profiles, the Obama people opted to use Anthony's volunteer-built page as their representation.

But then Anthony asked to be compensated in some way for his work on the profile . . .

The campaign deliberated on whether to hire Anthony, take him on as a consultant, or simply to buy him out. It chose to buy him out, but when the "How much?" conversation rolled around, Anthony asked for in excess of $40,000. Having none of that, the campaign shifted into hostile takeover mode and asked MySpace to cut off Anthony's access to the site. MySpace complied, citing that the official content posted on the page and the URL gave Senator Obama rights to the profile.

But not so fast. Instead of simply handing over Anthony's page to the campaign, MySpace forced Obama to start fresh -- instantly slashing the friend list from 160,000 to zero. (In three days, the campaign had reconnected with more than 20,000.)

As for Anthony, he can have his profile and friends back once he settles on a new URL.

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From techPresident via Slashdot

Bipartisan Gadgetry

Bipartisan Gadgetry
In a recent interview with the Associated Press, fourteen presidential hopefuls (seven from each side of the aisle) put the politics and posturing aside long enough to let their personalities leak through. Conversation topics ranged from pets and favorite TV shows down to the gadgets and technology each of the wannabe-in-chiefs depends on.

Democrat Chris Dodd revealed that he's a nut for the Web site, www.howstuffworks.com, while Hillary Rodham Clinton, John Edwards and Joe Biden all singled out the iPod as their guiltiest techno pleasure.

It's no surprise that BlackBerrys are popular with this crowd -- Bill Richardson actually called it his "CrackBerry" -- though Barack Obama had mixed feelings about listing the BlackBerry as his favorite: "It would have to be my Blackberry," he told AP. "The least favorite is my Blackberry as well."

Careful Obama, that kind of flip-floppery sounds eerily John Kerry-like.

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