A Platform to Robo-Call Politicians For Once, Not the Other Way Around
BY Nick Judd | Tuesday, November 15 2011
Anyone who's ever fielded a call on their phone only to find the pre-recorded voice of a Bill Clinton or Rick Scott on the other end of the line will appreciate this one: Anti-robocall activists Shaun Dakin and Aaron Titus recently launched ReverseRobocall.com, a website where users can pay to send their own pre-recorded message to any individual federal lawmaker or groups of lawmakers.
Dakin says the new site can also send a personal voice mail to lobbying groups behind specific legislation — in this case, behind HR 3035, a bill that would allow business to robocall your cell phone. (Price: $4.49.)
Flipping the script on 50 random Republican members of the House is listed as costing $10.49.
The price goes up based on the number of offices called.
"We manage the maximum average price by limiting the number of offices we call," Dakin wrote to me in an email. "We’d like to keep the average maximum price well under $20. But let’s say you wanted to call all 1,876 offices for all 535 Congressmen and Senators in a single go… that would cost somewhere around $97."
This idea, months in the works, creates a platform for something that activists in Florida and, naturally, Australia have been trying out for some time now: Use the rapidly decreasing cost and ease of integration between telephone networks and the Internet to take an obnoxious mass communication tool, up until now only for people with plenty of money and something to sell, and put it to use for activists with neither considerable financial resources or a product to peddle.