Christine O'Donnell's Ghosts of Campaign Websites Past
BY Nancy Scola | Friday, September 3 2010
For most people, registering a domain name and renewing it yearly would probably qualify as a minimal expense. Dreamhost, for example, is right now charging $9.95 for the privilege. Think it would be worth that much for Christine O'Donnell, a conservative commentator running for Senate in Delaware, to not have people Google up her name and find that her old campaign site reads this?: "This is where we used to have her message to supporters. Now we'll just say she's a stinky poop."
The Atlantic's Chris Good has details. O'Donnell might have forgotten about ChristineoODonnell08.com, but Google's memory runs is considerably stickier. From where I am, at least, searching for "Christine O'Donnell" in Google pops up the site as the third result. More happily for O'Donnell, her current site of Christine2010.com, with no mention of stinky poop and the like, comes up first. (Here's how the WayBack Machine has the site looking back in April 2008.)
On the one hand, the very ease by which you can buy and build websites increases the odds that people, in modern times, are going to leave vacated domain names in their wake. But you can make the argument that part of maintaining the good hygiene of your online presence is just something required of political figures in the early part of the 21st century.
Albany-based personal injury lawyer Warren Redlich is claiming responsibility for the site, writing on it that he had at first intended to use it to "preserve the historic record" of O'Donnell's 2008, which she lost to Joe Biden (who, of course, quickly gave up the Senate seat to become vice president). "However, Ms. O'Donnell didn't like that," reads the site, "so now we're just going to make fun of her." Sure she's thrilled.