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Joe Anthony

Joe Anthony


Last Updated: 11/18/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 31
Sign: Aries

City: Los Angeles
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 2/16/2007

Who Gives Kudos:


Wednesday, May 02, 2007 
Please read this article by Micah Sifry at techpresident.com. This is a thorough, and fair representation of what happened with the Obama unofficial Myspace profile that I created, and the events that occurred throughout the past few months.

To Barack Obama and Obama for America: "Big Payday"? If you had been paying any attention at all to this community in the past two and a half years you would know that money has nothing to do with this. You just kicked 160,000 of your strongest supporters right off of your own lawn.




Read this article at techpresident.com



The Battle to Control Obama's Myspace
By Micah L. Sifry, 05/01/2007 - 11:15pm

In November 2004, Joe Anthony, a paralegal living in Los Angeles, started a unofficial fan page for then-newly-elected Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) on MySpace.com. Inspired by Obama's keynote address at that summer's Democratic convention, Anthony had never been politically active before. "I was just blown away," he told me. He put time into the site every day, answering emails from people wanting to "friend" the page, pointing them to voter registration information, and, once Obama threw his hat into the ring, telling them where to find out more detailed positions taken by the candidate.

By the time of Obama's official campaign announcement in late January, Anthony's Obama profile--which had the valuable url of myspace.com/barackobama--already had more than 30,000 friends, well more than the other contenders. Over the following weeks, it continued to grow at a rapid pace, generating lots of headlines about Obama winning the "MySpace primary." Yesterday, the profile had just over 160,000 friends. Today, that url has only about 12,000. And it's under new ownership. Joe Anthony, one of the super volunteers of the Connected Age, has lost control of the page he started to the professionals on Obama's staff.

How all this happened is a complicated tale that is still unfolding, and none of the parties involved--Anthony, the Obama online team, and the MySpace political operation--emerge from this story unscathed. Speaking on background, Obama campaign staffers are spreading word that Anthony just wanted a "big payday." Anthony in turn has posted a missive on his blog (that was originally sent to me as an email) accusing the Obama team of "bullying...[and] rotten and dishonest" behavior. However one parses those accusations (more below), the Obama campaign's reputation as the most net-savvy of 2008 has taken a big hit. And MySpace executives have been forced to take extraordinary action to resolve a dispute between two high-profile users of their invaluable site, one a passionate volunteer with a huge network of friends and the other a frontrunning presidential candidate who has helped make MySpace a new factor in the 2008 contest.

The Barocket Takes Off

At first, all was rosy between Anthony and the Obama campaign. Chris Hughes, one of the campaign's first internet staffers (and a co-founder of Facebook.com), emailed Anthony through the MySpace page and both sides were pleased to connect with each other. For several weeks, they collaborated on a daily basis, with the Obama campaign offering advice to Anthony on how to improve the site, sharing content with him, helping him place a fundraising widget on the site, etc. He in turn gave the campaign password access to the profile in case they wanted to tweak it quickly, but they made little use of it and relied mainly on Anthony to maintain the site.

It was a labor of love for him. Here at TechPresident, we started getting emails from Anthony every now and then, making sure our own tracking of Obama's MySpace friends was up-to-date, and pointing us to his progress elsewhere in the campaign. "I'm working on [the site] in the mornings, lunch breaks, and for a couple of hours every night," he wrote me on March 1st. "Nearly 10,000 friend requests this past week, and all are unsolicited!" he added "This profile has evolved into quite a large community and I'm glad that it seems to be mobilizing people."

But sometime in the middle of March things began to go awry. On March 17, MySpace announced the creation of the "Impact Channel," which aimed to focused attention on the presidential race, and the Obama campaign had them use Anthony's Obama profile as the site the Impact Channel pointed to. As you can see from TechPresident's tracking page, Obama started gaining friends on MySpace at a much faster pace, hitting 80,000 a few days later. Anthony's workload began to grow. A few weeks later, when Obama's picture was featured on MySpace's "Cool New People" box on its home page (Hillary Clinton is there now), everything exploded. Obama's friend total barocketed from 100,000 to 140,000 in a week. Meanwhile, Chris Hughes had handed the MySpace portfolio to a new campaign hire, Scott Goodstein, who came to Chicago with tons of experience running social network-focused efforts for an impressive array of progressive groups and causes.

It's around this point that the informal working relationship between Anthony and the Obama campaign went sour. The exact chronology of events is in dispute but the general trajectory is clear. As his volunteer workload grew to all hours, Anthony decided to email the Obama campaign asking to be paid in some way for his time. This set off discussions within the campaign about what to do, and ultimately they decided they had to control the page. Unfortunately for all concerned, the negotiations on how to do that were a disaster. Anthony says:

For the past few weeks, the campaign decided it would be better if they just took control of the profile and we decided to try to come to some agreement. By this time, I didn't have quite as much respect for the campaign guys, and frankly felt like I was just being used. They knew about this profile the entire time, and really just waited until it got enough media coverage and friends request so they could step in and bully me out of it.

The last few weeks were just insane. They kept scheduling phone conferences with me, I would wake up early that day after barely sleeping the night before, I'd take time off work, etc. and each after another would be postponed at the last minute. This went on for weeks.

It got to the point where I didn't feel comfortable turning the profile over to the campaign unless they paid for it. This was largely symbolic. The same campaign that inspired me to work so hard to build this community, the same campaign whose underlying message stresses "the power of the individual to have an impact on politics", was constantly downplaying my role in this, bullying me, and a couple of other things that were just rotten and dishonest (specifically in connection with Myspace, and the campaign quashing a recent NPR interview about the profile).

Crash and Burn

Obama insiders see things very differently. They agree that at first all was copacetic, and that Anthony was only helping the Obama campaign with his site. But as attention grew to MySpace, they started to worry about a potential train wreck. A Newsweek story noting that Anthony had some minor facts wrong about Obama's biography made them nervous. And while he complied with every request they made about content on the site--keeping a prominent disclaimer stating that it was an unofficial page, removing a link to Obama's Senate podcasts because it might be an FEC violation, culling a "friend" from a Larry Flynt profile page--they chafed nonetheless.

Coordination with a volunteer they had never met, who lived far from campaign HQ, and who controlled an asset of increasing value to their effort, was just not as seamless as they would like. Who knows who he is actually emailing, they worried. How do we know if the answers he is giving people are the right ones? Welcome to the age of voter-generated media, where a super-volunteer using popular online tools and sites can become as important as big donor or a top campaign surrogate.

Anthony's request to be compensated for all the work he was putting into Obama's Myspace page--anywhere from five to ten hours a day--was the final straw, apparently. After kicking around various ideas including hiring him or making him a consultant, the Obama people asked Anthony to propose a one-time consulting fee. In exchange he would give them control of the page, with credit for the work he had put into it.

"I went for a four mile walk to think about it," he told me, continuing:

I considered the time I had put into it from January 1st of this year, not counting the previous two years. It was about $39,000. Plus I asked that if any fees were to be paid to MySpace by the campaign up to that point in time, those should be shared with me, up to $10,000. There was no counter-offer. They said they didn't have any money.

Indeed, it appears the Obama internet team was shocked by the size of Anthony's proposal and argued to themselves that it was proof that he was just in it for the money, even though campaigns like theirs regularly give tens of thousands of dollars to highpriced media consultants who would give their eye-teeth to deliver 160,000 rabid activists to a campaign. Instead to them, Anthony's bid was all the more reason to get control of the site. Obama's staffers are now spreading the word that Anthony wanted a big payday, including a huge percentage of any ad buys on MySpace. I have a copy of Anthony's email proposal, however, and it contradicts that claim.

Of course, no one really knows how to value the creation of a popular political website with tens of thousands of members. Big sites like Flickr.com and Weblogs.com have earned their owners somewhere between $20 and $40 per member. Care2, the massive progressive email list vendor, charges about $1 per email address that they generate for a campaign. But it would be silly to suggest that Anthony generated 160,000 MySpace friends for Obama on his own--if he wasn't plugging a very charismatic candidate like Obama he'd never have grown such a large site.

Whatever the case, at this point it appears the Obama people simply decided that they would get control of the myspace.com/barackobama url by going around Anthony and getting MySpace to lock down his access to it. In their view, Anthony was violating MySpace's terms of service by falsely representing himself as Obama, and thus they didn't have to pay him anything. The worst that would happen, they reasoned, is that they would have to rebuild the candidate's network of friends.

And this is indeed what is happening now. At the request of the Obama campaign, the url myspace.com/barackobama has been taken away from Joe Anthony and put in their hands. Jen Psaki, the deputy press director for Obama, says:

There is an incredible amount of support for Obama's candidacy on MySpace and our goal is to ensure that we are being as responsive as possible to the community. Because MySpace and the community treated the work as official and due to sheer volume, our campaign staff wanted make sure users had direct access to the campaign. We support the MySpace communty, and look forward to building our relationship.

Was this action fair to Joe Anthony? MySpace itself has come up with a positively Solomonic solution to that question, promising to restore Anthony's network of 160,000 friends as soon as he picks a new url for whatever unofficial Obama fan page he may care to create. Says Jeff Berman, MySpace's senior vice president for public affairs and general manager of video:

We are firmly committed to empowering our users and protecting their rights. The situation with Senator Obama's profile became an unfortunate instance where a user gave a campaign functional control of a profile and the relationship between the two broke down. We felt under the circumstances that Senator Obama had the right to the URL containing his name and to the official campaign content that was provided, but that the user should retain the basic elements of the profile, including the friends who had been accumulated. Now that each Presidential candidate controls his/her own MySpace page, we don't expect this to be a problem again.

And indeed, for MySpace this probably will never be a problem again, for in the future it's likely that political campaigns will always make sure to build and maintain their own official presences there.

But this latest episode in the evolving interaction between voter-generated media and campaign-controlled content raises several unsettled issues:

*If it weren't for the hundreds of hours put into sites like MySpace by passionate volunteers like Joe Anthony, would the folks at MySpace even have anything like an Impact Channel? The only reason campaigns and advertisers are taking sites like MySpace seriously is because they have millions of users; shouldn't the volunteers who help draw the crowds to these new online town halls get some kind of compensation beyond a little modest recognition from political professionals now and then?

*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?

*Why couldn't the Obama people find the money to work out an amicable arrangement with Anthony? What are they spending the $26 million they raised last quarter on?

The most intriguing thing about this whole mess is this is the first time I can think of where the grass-roots activist at the bottom of the pile has a megaphone as big as the folks who tried to boss him around. Right now Joe Anthony is lying on his sofa, trying to gather his thoughts as he wonders what happens to all the sweat and passion he put into the last two and a half years for Barack Obama. As best as I can tell, he really doesn't know what he should do, because he's never been in these shoes, and he's as bewildered as anyone could be about how it all came crashing to the ground. But unlike every activist who's ever been crushed by events beyond his control, he can do something that just might give him a clue as to what comes next. He can ask his 160,000 friends for help.
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masao (JC)
Mario Quinteros

 
<P>wow man...that's an "intense story"</P><P>I gotta say..I tilt my hat to you Joe...you're the man!</P>
 
Posted by masao (JC) on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 4:35 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>This is horrible and people should make their feelings known to the Obama campaign!! </P><P>Perhaps we should post some messages on his new site?</P><P> </P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 6:15 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>Hey Joe,</P><P> You should also make a shorter version of this a bulletin post so they all know what is going on. I really think you should fight with myspace about getting the profile back because when you search for it says it is the unofficial profile. When you click on it, it says the official profile. They ripped you off but good.</P><P> </P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 6:25 AM
[Reply to this
Joe Anthony
Joe Anthony

 
Please do! At this point, the campaign itself is the only party involved not supporting me and my actions. In fact, they're apparently working to discredit me.

I don't believe that one person who has personally witnessed my conduct in managing the unofficial Obama profile since November of 2004 would believe that my efforts were anything but genuine.

Thank you to everyone who has been emailing me and commenting on my page to show your support!

I've only received ONE negative email so far, from a profile with only 1 friend. (Nice try, whoever you are.)



 
Posted by Joe Anthony on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 6:24 AM
[Reply to this
Moonblossom

 
You really shouldn't judge someone by how many myspace friends they have.  That's pathetic.
 
Posted by Moonblossom on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 - 5:22 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>Well if you don't mind I can post this on Dkos for you. I will hit the Obama site with a message tonight as well. </P><P>This is so wrong.</P><P> </P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 6:34 AM
[Reply to this
Joe Anthony
Joe Anthony

 
What is "Dkos"?

looking into this. . .

 
Posted by Joe Anthony on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:46 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
Message sent to Obama!! Everyone else should do this too.
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 6:38 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>Joe have a question:</P><P>  The Tech site states you gave them access to the profile but you say you did not. For accuracy can you clarify?</P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:27 AM
[Reply to this
Joe Anthony
Joe Anthony

 
Initially, yes I did give them access.

At some point, I decided to no longer give them access until we had an agreement (which at that point there was no request for compensation).

The relationship became more complex, especially when the campaign began working with Myspace, and I didn't want to be solely responsible for the profile in the event that it was phished or hacked, etc. This was just out of caution.

I'll be happy to answer anyone's questions.

 
Posted by Joe Anthony on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:31 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>Thanks for the quick answer. This will be on Dailykos tomorrow. I will probably publish it around 3 am my time to get the early morning traffic there. I hope you are ready for a lot of questions from Kossers!!! </P><P>I hope this helps you out and I guarantee you Obama will be getting a lot of calls on this. </P><P> </P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:44 AM
[Reply to this
Joe Anthony
Joe Anthony

 
Thanks again Kat!
 
Posted by Joe Anthony on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:45 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>Joe go here,</P><P>  I posted the diary on Dkos</P><P> http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/5/2/35114/27244</P><P>   </P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:53 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>You're welcome</P><P> A lot of the candidates staff scroll the blogs and Kos is the biggest so I am hoping some staffer sees it and does the right thing by you. I may be an Edwards supporter but I would drop supporting him in an instant if he did this. This is not about the best candidate but getting respect for netroots and blogger work. </P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 8:07 AM
Joe Anthony
Joe Anthony

 
Thank you Kat, so nice of you do that!



 
Posted by Joe Anthony on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 8:00 AM
lili

 
this is incredible.  i see i missed quite a bit while i was in nyc...
joe: don know what to say, 'cept i imagine this has very little to do with obama, and much to do with the smarmy campaign officials who are truly compromising the senator's grass roots base.
i hope there are many four mile trails for you to process all this bs on.
hugs, support, + shared disgust n resentment for all you've been burdened with lately.


 
Posted by lili on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:16 AM
[Reply to this
 

 
"A Newsweek story noting that Anthony had some minor facts wrong about Obama's biography made them nervous."

Ummm what? Did we read the same Newsweek story? I actually just re-read it & found zero mention of any sort of Obama biography, let alone errors about it in the 'space. Unless there is another article that I didn't read, they are insane.

What an OBUMMER.

 
Posted by   on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 7:44 AM
[Reply to this
Kat

 
<P>Joe,</P><P> They have changed the myspace  blurb to say it is the official site, the google blurb still says unofficial. If you have any of this site cached now would be a good time to make sure it is safe so you can prove it later if you have to.</P>
 
Posted by Kat on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 2:39 PM
[Reply to this
Post-Josh Josh

 
Solidarity, Joe. Stand strong.

I'm sorry you got the shaft like this. It's a tough thing when someone wants to take away something you built.
 
Posted by Post-Josh Josh on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 4:18 PM
[Reply to this
Derek

 
<P>You can't blame the team from wanting to control the campaign entirely. Your profile for the candidate was well-done and informative. Still, requesting $40K for making a MySpace page is ridiculous. And if this had "nothing to do with a big payday," then why ask for the money in the first place?</P>
 
Posted by Derek on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 6:01 PM
[Reply to this
MnM

 
<P>His workload was going to increase exponentially, so why not ask for more money.   $40k, is insignificant considering the amount of hours that he invested into this.  This site was built to help the cause.  This amount of money was only requested, when they were trying to take him out of the picture.  They asked him for a one time fee for all of his work.  If I was treated in such a manner, I would have asked for more.  Yes, I know this was volunteer work, but when this gets to a point where it consumes most of your time in which you need to make a living, then it is only fair to get compensated.  If you were in his shoes, would you just walk away, or simply ask for $500 bucks, knowing this wasn't a fair situation?  It's not like he asked for millions of dollars, now that would have been ridiculous.</P><P> </P>
 
Posted by MnM on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 - 5:29 AM
[Reply to this
merrell

 
I can.  And blame is a superficial way of saying stealing second base is ok if you break the umpire's leg , run away, slide in second - you're 'safe' because the umpire was blinded by pain.  So politics is a cheap steal?  In the interest of "intellectual property" rights, there's a belief that something worth stealing is also worth buying, and  "40 k" is probably a cheap sale.  Of course, if it isn't worth anything, why are you writing about it?  Obama's "team" is no different from any other team sponsorship.  Think about a sports figure, a public figure, and try to draw a hypothetical: "a nice idea so I'm taking it".  It's property.  It's been created.  It's been maintained.  It's a steal.  Ridiculous?  Not true.  Obama just simply applies political subterfuge, and "takes" freely.  Historians have caveats here.  There's plenty old steals.  I guess anytime you want something you just think it's in play, it's fair play, and so you take it.   Heads up.  Ball's coming down. 
 
Posted by merrell on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 10:38 PM
[Reply to this
Avant Strangel

 
The guy dedicated 2 and half YEARS of his life to this guy before anyone was even THINKING Presidential Candidate!  Plus Obama's camp proposed the idea.  Based upon the fact that at base value this is worth at least 160k not counting the potential fundraising and NOW add onto that the damage Obama's camp has done in exercising eminient domain  and what his high media consultans will have to do to try and spin this and 40k would have been WELL worth it.

If Obama's camp was thinking they would have hired Joe or paid him for his time, effort and dedication before any of Obama's over priced consulants came in and pulled this high jack.  Because I assure you they are gettin way more then 40k and all they had to do was build off of Joe's work. 

Instead they do an end run, and then bad mouth the guy when it was Obama's camps idea to pay Joe.  So let's not make it about Joe.  He was an uber volunteer.. and I use that term volunteer loosely because he was never part of Obama's camp. He did it as a hobby long before anyone had ideas about Obama running.  Btw, volunteering doesn't always mean FREE.  If your efforts incur so much of a drain on you in terms of resources, time and energy which actually is a cost, and to the point it's having an impact on you then by sheer neccessity compensation is reasonable.

Joe was an uber helper and Obama's crew should have recognized that and REWARDED such effort and dedication.  They could have given him a job, or paid him.  Taken him on tour as a shining example.  Given him a post commenstrate with his skill much like politician's do anyway and Obama's camp would have gotten better results from it.  Obama would have been touted as truly recognizing the efforts of the individual.  The return Obama could have gotten in terms of P.R. and the money and votes those addresses could have generated would have far out weighed 40 thousand or even 80 thousand bucks.

Because I assure you now he has officially given the Right Wing something to actually STICK and I'm sure Fox NOISE is gonna be all over this.  Obama discarded someone so easily who was promoting him how will he treat everyone else.

Until this point Obama has been flawless but I think this action just turned into an achille's heel.  If the media consultants are smart. They'll do the right thing, pay him, apologize and hire him.  Obama had my vote but this event has me rethinking.  In the scheme of things, in regards to scandals other officials have had it may not be as morally shocking but the principle is just as important.

You don't punish dedication. Recognize what this guy was doing and pay him.  The world is changing.  Why is it only those who aren't gov't officials during campaign season have to be happy with a pat on the back??

Joe hold your head high.  Despite the fact you got shafted people will recognize your vision and dedication.  You tried to do a good thing and got burned.  But you did the right thing in standing up for yourself.  NO ONE is disposable. You are NOT the bad guy in this.

 
Posted by Avant Strangel on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 3:36 PM
[Reply to this
Avant Strangel

 
I have to add an addendum.  After reading the info on Obama's site.  I didn't know he did offer you a job.  But it required you to move to Chicago.  So in this case I can see where the split happens.  At this point I can see how you guys agree to disagree.  Granted he's got domain rights to his name but they could have handled it much better then they did. So his camp wasn't as much of a jerk as I thought.  They tried a few options and did an end run without thinking.  Because now the fallout is going to cost them more then what it would have cost to pay you.
 
Posted by Avant Strangel on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 6:45 PM
[Reply to this
Joe Anthony
Joe Anthony

 
I understand that. Why did I ask for money? Because at that point, our relationship was already deteoriating, and I didn't want to see these guys ruin this amazing community. They asked me to propose a fee. I had no idea what type of fee to propose, but I proposed one I thought was reasonable. There was no counter-offer. They then literally stole the page, and now are accusing me of just looking for a "big payday".





 
Posted by Joe Anthony on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 6:05 PM
[Reply to this
johnny

 
<P>Bummer.</P><P>If I were you, I would sell the opportunity to connect with 160,000 people to another campaign.</P>
 
Posted by johnny on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 8:10 PM
[Reply to this
Places To See & Be Seen

 
I am A publisher of a Magazine in Boston & have been on the fence about who I may Vote this story has made things a little easier. I also am requesting your friendship through this site and I will pass out your message to everyone I come in contact with. sounds to me that Obama is a communist is this what we want to lead our country. Hey lets build some anti Obama myspace pages I will Build one and contact you with it
 
Posted by Places To See & Be Seen on Wednesday, May 02, 2007 - 9:13 PM
[Reply to this
Adam Rinkleff
Lirath Pynnor

 
Im a communist, and we don't steal myspace pages -- Obama is a capitalist, that's why he was able to work out a backroom deal with big-industry McMySpace, and shaft the hard-working peon who collected 160'000 friends for Barak. 
 
Posted by Adam Rinkleff on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 12:44 AM
[Reply to this
A.P.R.M.

 
<P>I read on yahoo that because of this unfortunate misunderstanding that you said you wont vote Barack Obama, don't you find that a bit childish. If you truly believe in this candidate and what he can do for this country, why would you decide not to vote for him just because his Campaign people wont pay you for  your VOLUNTEER work. You're petty, give Hilary your vote because you don't deserve the honor of  voting for Barack Obama.</P>
 
Posted by A.P.R.M. on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 12:54 AM
[Reply to this
Avant Strangel

 
If someone came in and tried to discard you after you invested over 2 years in something and you weren't even in their camp and then decided to bad mouth you would you still think that's the type of person you'd want to vote for? Someone who will just dispose of you?

It's a simple question of respect.  You don't step on the people who champion your cause and expect someone to let you get away with it.

 
Posted by Avant Strangel on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 3:36 PM
[Reply to this
Coastal Liberal

 
<P>I'm sorry that this happened to you. I know that with all of the hard work that you put on the site it must have been very disheartening to be disregarded by his campaign managers. I was a friend on your unofficial site. To be honest.. his handlers would have done better to let you keep control of the site. It gave it more of a grass roots type of feel to have a volunteer running it. That is what really drew me to Barack Obama. This fiasco reminds me of Karl Rove. </P><P>P.s. I looked on the new Obama site. Yours was better. The new one loads too slow. Its gonna make it hard for them to rebuild.</P><P>Good luck </P>
 
Posted by Coastal Liberal on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 2:05 AM
[Reply to this
All Smiles

 
What a shame?  The campaign staff has screwed up before (Clinton's in L.A.) and now this.  I believe you should have been compensated.  And I agree that they knowingly took full advantage of the situation and you.  That's politics.  Unfortunatley, they messed with the wrong group of young people.  If I can do anything, let me know.  Hopefully, Obama's overall campaign for President doesn't fail, because I think he inspired a lot of young people to become politically aware, which in itself is a wonderful thing.  I also think that we young people have to remember that Obama himself is not going to run this country, it is the us, the individuals, who have to change our mindset from allowing unfair or outright ridiculous decisions to be made by our neighbors to using the policitical process to get what we want.  ***OBAMA 2008***
 
Posted by All Smiles on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 3:30 PM
[Reply to this
Jim & Kim Baker®

 
<span style="font-weight: bold;">This has really forced me to take a hard look at my support for Obama. I would have liked to have seen him take the moral and ethical high ground by doing right by Joe. My concern is that if he cannot take control of his own campaign staff now, how will he ever make the hard decisions when running the entire country?

I have to applaud Joe for being the bigger man in all of this. While aggrieved, and rightfully so, his statements have been fair, balanced and reasonable. Perhaps I need to start a <span style="font-style: italic;">Draft Joe Anthony for President</span> page?

Kudos, Joe. You're a good man.
</span>
 
Posted by Jim & Kim Baker® on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 4:03 PM
[Reply to this
PinkyNiccuh!

 
no if and's or buts about it....this whole situation sucks....But this internet shit is still new territory.  But this is kinda discouraging for people who never liked politics and decided to take an interest.  Just let me know what the new site is and im there.....I'm still voting for Barack in 08.....and I'm still gonna be ur friend Joe!!!
 
Posted by PinkyNiccuh! on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 6:28 PM
[Reply to this
Michelle
Michelle Ford

 
<P>Sorry this happened to you, I wouldn't have known about an Obama page if it weren't for yours.  You do have  the "power of the people" (those 160,000) behind you...that's a lot of votes my friend.  Sounds like a case of "the little guy" getting squashed...taking the high road and working something out would be best for both sides; I hope that will happen.  Seems you've put a lot of your life into this, good luck.</P><P>Michelle</P>
 
Posted by Michelle on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 6:33 PM
[Reply to this
Tess

 
I wonder just how much of this Obama really knew about when it was happening.  I mean, he's a pretty busy guy right now with a lot of people to meet and a lot of hands to shake. I would think that a myspace page would be the last thing on his mind, and it wouldn't surprise me if he didn't know about this situation until after the fact.  I believe the real problem lies in his campaign office. Whoever is responsible for this fisaco should be fired, as that person clearly does not have Obama's best interests at heart or you would have received a counter offer. Politicians love it when other people generate votes for them and with a campaign of this magnitude, they rely on that. It would be pretty stupid to mess with 160,000 votes! It is therefore hard for me to believe Obama directly had a hand in this, and I still plan to support him. But even if he was involved in it, when you think about all the other people running for this position, Obama still looks pretty good.  Certainly none of us are perfect - we all make huge mistakes from time to time. What happened to you was a huge mistake on the part of the Obama campaign, a mistake I sincerely hope they can recover from. Let's put this incident behind us, forgive those involved, and give our support to this man who wants to make a difference in people's lives. 
 
Posted by Tess on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 6:50 PM
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<P>What has happened here to you Joe is ridiculous. The amount of compensation you asked for is not enough! I truly hope Obama wakes up and takes control because for the first time in a very long time, I felt hope! Hope for the people. I felt good about voting for Obama and I am sure I will still vote for him. But he MUST take control. If he does not know what the people want, how can he be a leader?</P><P>Stand up for what you believe in always!</P>
 
Posted by on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 7:30 PM
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Cassandra DeAnn

 
<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt">Joe,</P><P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"> ..:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></P><P><SPAN style="FONT-SIZE: 12pt; FONT-FAMILY: 'Times New Roman'; mso-fareast-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA">This is an unfortunate predicament you are in. Unfortunate, yet actually exciting! Think of it like this: Who knew it would turn out to be this big ordeal! One little idea you had and steadily determined to stay current has made such a big impact on society and stirred up so much controversy! Well that’s what happens in Politics, no matter whom you’re rooting for. I agree with both sides at this point but I still believe in what’s right and wrong. They are correct when using such phrases like posing to be someone you are not (no matter for good cause or bad), the possible incorrect answers to questions answered to fans by whom they think is Obama and the problems that could cause. HOWEVER, this was something done that generated such success if they wanted to continue the process and take it into their own hands to prevent any issues in the future with possible compliance issues, etc, then it’s only right for them to compensate you GRACIOUSLY. Your price is nothing compared to not only the work you put into it but nonetheless the response you generated for him. It’s obvious they understand (as we all do) this is a valuable tool for their campaign or they wouldn’t have tried to negotiate control in the first place. Should it just been all about “technicalities” and what not, and not about the responses, requests, and supporters, then they would’ve requested myspace just completely delete the account all together. But no, they understand what kind of detriment that could cause to fans and how many they would loose, so instead they try to just take complete control all together. I think they should’ve just paid you fairly and taken over from there. Had they no one would’ve ever even known! Instead there is a bunch of stirred up fans & media eating this all up. But keep your head up Joe, you did the right thing starting this off with the right intentions from the beginning and though I support Obama completely, politics is still…well..politics. It’s a dirty game and once you involve yourself in it you ought to be prepared for possible outcomes. </SPAN></P>
 
Posted by Cassandra DeAnn on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 7:38 PM
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Angela Blumenstein Schultz

 
<P>If you VOLUNTEERED, you shouldn't expect money.  It's your fault for putting in too many hours that you couldn't handle. </P>
 
Posted by Angela Blumenstein Schultz on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 7:38 PM
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Ang-a-palooza!

 
We appreciate your time and effort Joe... Even if "they" don't.
 
Posted by Ang-a-palooza! on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 7:40 PM
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<P>hey. don't second guess yourself; you're in the right.  the only thing you may have possibly done wrong was believing that it wasn't about the money.  for them...it was about the money.  either they can't believe that you truly did this as a labor of loyalty, love and integrity, or they just simply want to flip the script and get you to buy into their ill-conceived theories about your intentions.  keep your head up, as they say.  STAND.</P>
 
Posted by on Thursday, May 03, 2007 - 9:25 PM
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Katrice

 
<p>I will be letting the "officials" know exactly how I feel about all this BS!!  You're hard work has been greatly appreciated by myself and I can only assume thousands of others.  Thanks!!
</p>
 
Posted by Katrice on Saturday, May 05, 2007 - 4:20 AM
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Jason
Jason McCoy

 
<P>Just wanted to add my support to you and let you know that people appreciate all the effort you put into this site. Surely you know that whenever regular people do something phenomenal, they get taken over. </P><P>Now, a lot of people seem to be soured on the candidate, but the fact is, he still stands for the things that I believe in. It seems that his staffers could do with a lesson in how to treat their staunchest supporters. </P><P>Hang in there.</P>
 
Posted by Jason on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 - 5:16 AM
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Duke
Duke Simpkins

 
Hey man,
Thanks for all your hard work. I hope that you do get compensated for this and I hope that you still vote for Barak Obama. Myspace has grown into a monster. The ramifications of this could ruin his chances if not played out correctly, and wouldn't that suck to lose our best presidential candidate to myspace? If that happens I'm canceling my account.
 
Posted by Duke on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 - 5:20 AM
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SlapaFool

 
<P>They screwed you over buddy. $39,000 might've been a bit much to ask for; but two and a half years of work (or even five months) is worth more than a $100 and a "signed" picture. If this is the way his team treats his supporters then he's lost my vote. </P>
 
Posted by SlapaFool on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 - 5:38 AM
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V@LUE™
V Xiong

 
damn, obama just lost my Vote! i think you should be compensated for your hard work and support of obama! i'm heading to the BIDEN or EDWARD camp! ;)
 
Posted by V@LUE™ on Tuesday, August 07, 2007 - 5:40 AM
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