Robocalling Against Robocalls for Fun and Profit
BY Nick Judd | Tuesday, August 23 2011
This news cycle was supposed to evolve a different way for Rick Scott.
After reaching dismally low approval ratings in some opinion polls, the Florida governor was supposed to find help earlier this month in the form of robo-calls bearing his voice and paid for by the state Republican Party. Instead, the calls angered Floridians — and gave fodder to a progressive activist group, which included a sort of reverse robo-call into its campaign to generally make his life miserable. The group, Florida Watch, gave people the ability to call in and record a message for Scott; those messages were later delivered to Scott's office as voicemails, one after the other, and uploaded to the Web.
These hijinks earned Florida Watch a media mention here, and, later, on MSNBC commentator Rachel Maddow's show.
Shooting for the cycle, Florida Watch is now out with a fund-raising appeal to supporters, pointing to the Maddow clip as damage done and asking for money to continue its efforts:
Coincidentally, privacy consultant and anti-robocall advocate Shaun Dakin writes in to say that he'll soon be launching a product to protest political robocalls — by robocalling politicians, ala Pink Slip Rick. Dakin says he had been working on that project before Florida Watch launched its initiative.