Obama’s MySpace Fiasco

Posted on May 2nd, 2007
By Todd Zeigler in Politics, Social Networks

Micah Sifry has a fantastic story up on the battle currently being waged over Barack Obama’s MySpace profile. In a nutshell, a few years ago an Obama fanatic reserved Obama’s name on MySpace and began building a network on Obama’s behalf. The campaign worked with the supporter for a while, got fed up and went to MySpace and forced the supporter to give up the profile. Micah has all the bloody details.

At the end of the article Micah asks this question:

Is it true that once a voter-generated site gets major traction, the campaign affected has to control it? Can a front-running presidential campaign–even one as devoted to empowering supporters to take their own initiatives and connect to each other through social network tools as the Obama campaign–afford a major site run by a campaign volunteer outside their control? Is such control even possible?

In a post on Prezvid, Jeff Jarvis seems to imply that campaigns should let supporters own the candidate spaces on these social networks:

The moral of the story is that politics is still all about control. There is no playbook for handing over control to the people, only for acting like it. Every attempt to use social networking on the internet for campaigns is just that — an attempt to use.

To me this is a really simple issue. The Obama campaign has to have ultimate control over www.myspace.com/barackobama. Period.

Having ventured into the MySpace wilderness looking for candidate profiles, it is almost impossible to tell the real profiles from the fakes ones. Users can be easily mislead into friending the wrong person. By owning the most common profile name and maintaining an official presence, the campaign provides clarity to users, most of whom are looking for the endorsed version of the profile. I’m all for supporters creating their own groups and conducting their own activities, I just see value in having an official presence in addition to the voter-generated ones.

I also don’t think it is unreasonable for a campaign to want to exercise control over what pictures and blog entries are posted and what friend requests they accept. Every other user of MySpace has that control, why shouldn’t Barack Obama?

If that makes me top down, I guess I’m top down.

Regarding the rest of story, I agree that the Obama campaign mishandled this in every way imaginable. As Jerome Armstrong says, hire the kid that built up the profile. Buy the profile. Negotiate. Do something. Pushing the supporter aside and starting over just seems like an unfathomably dumb thing to do to me.

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  1. The Case for Supporter Control of MySpace » The Bivings Report

Comments

  1. Steve Petersen

    Todd,

    I think that the discontent of the original http://www.barackobama.com/barackobama operator is not what should primarily other the Obama camp.

    A social network faux pas can damage anyone’s reputation on the Internet. Thus, many people on MySpace will likely not approve or appreciate how the campaign handled this situation. Will this affect how they view Obama and his campaign? Maybe.

  2. JohnStodder

    Fascinating.

    I agree with you mostly. Obama should have control over any domain that bears his name, in a context that suggests he or his campaign are responsible for it.

    But why couldn’t this site have been given a new name, like obamafan or friendsofbarackobama, with all content transferred to this new domain, and with a promise of assistance in redirecting the traffic?

    Jarvis loves to scream about the hairy hand of centralized control, but he knows darn well that campaigns have no control over most of what is said about them by their supporters or fans on the Web, and aren’t even trying. This guy’s only mistake was taking obama’s name. The campaign should have defined it’s efforts as trying to get the name back. The content shouldn’t have been made the issue.

  3. Todd Zeigler

    John,

    I agree with everything you wrote. I think the mistake the Obama campaign made was not dealing with this before the list grew to include 150,000 people. Would have been much easier to handle before the profile blew up.

  4. Alex Hammer

    Thanks Todd!!!!!

    Update 1: “Obama MySpace Discrepancy - Joe Rospars and TechPresident” http://hammer2006.blogspot.com.....spars.html
    Update 2: “TechPresident: How to Value a MySpace Mega-Group” http://hammer2006.blogspot.com.....-mega.html
    Update 3: “Joe Anthony on his current MySpace page: “Perhaps it should just be deleted.”" http://hammer2006.blogspot.com.....-page.html
    Original: Obama, MySpace, Joe Anthony, Day 2 - Latest Coverage By Leading Media (New York Times, TechPresident, Washington Post, Huffington Post)
    http://hammer2006.blogspot.com.....atest.html

about this blog

The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research and analysis on the web-based communications industry. TBR content is posted, created and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.

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