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Spam Google Republicans

Google To Stop Exempting Campaign Email From Automated Spam Detection (washingtonpost.com) 94

Google plans to discontinue a pilot program that allows political campaigns to evade its email spam filters, the latest round in the technology giant's tussle with the GOP over online fundraising. The Washington Post reports: The company will let the program sunset at the end of January instead of prolonging it, Google's lawyers said in a filing on Monday. The filing, in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California, asked the court to dismiss a complaint lodged by the Republican National Committee accusing Google of "throttling its email messages because of the RNC's political affiliation and views." "The RNC is wrong," Google argued in its motion. "Gmail's spam filtering policies apply equally to emails from all senders, whether they are politically affiliated or not." [...]

While rejecting the GOP's attacks, Google nonetheless bowed to them. The company asked the Federal Election Commission to greenlight the pilot program, available to all campaigns and political committees registered with the federal regulator. The company anticipated at the time that a trial run would last through January 2023. Thousands of public comments implored the FEC to advise against the program, which consumer advocates and other individuals said would overwhelm Gmail users with spam. Anne P. Mitchell, a lawyer and founder of an email certification service called Get to the Inbox, wrote that Google was "opening up the floodgates to their users' inboxes ... to assuage partisan disgruntlement."

The FEC gave its approval in August, with one Democrat joining the commission's three Republicans to clear the way for the initiative. Ultimately, more than 100 committees of both parties signed up for the program, said Google spokesman Jose Castaneda. The RNC was not one of them, as Google emphasized in its motion to dismiss in the federal case in California. "Ironically, the RNC could have participated in a pilot program leading up to the 2022 midterm elections that would have allowed its emails to avoid otherwise-applicable forms of spam detection," the filing stated. "Many other politically-affiliated entities chose to participate in that program, which was approved by the FEC. The RNC chose not to do so. Instead, it now seeks to blame Google based on a theory of political bias that is both illogical and contrary to the facts alleged in its own Complaint." [...] "Indeed, effective spam filtering is a key feature of Gmail, and one of the main reasons why Gmail is so popular," the filing stated.

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Google To Stop Exempting Campaign Email From Automated Spam Detection

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  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @06:18AM (#63238696)

    Ultimately, more than 100 committees of both parties signed up for the program, said Google spokesman Jose Castaneda. The RNC was not one of them, ...

    They would have had one less thing to complain about. Grievance is their bread and butter now.

    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      Grievance is their bread and butter now.

      When was manufactured grievance not conservatives' bread and butter? They invented cancel culture [medium.com]! Anyone heard of Salem?

      • by Entrope ( 68843 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @07:22AM (#63238768) Homepage

        It's pretty historically ignorant to claim that the Salem witch hunts were the first example of cancel culture. The Inquisition predates that, as do pogroms [wikipedia.org]. There are endless similar examples going back through history across the globe.

        The major distinction of cancel culture is that it's a rather totalitarian backlash against what was the dominant culture. That's why so many people find it unsettling, and it's also why comparisons to Salem witch trials fail.

        • It’s actually much more common than that if you look. Also, not surprising - humans have changed very little in terms of the innate apes we are in the last couple thousand years, so trends in our societal behaviour happen over and over again. We do learn, however, so often it’s under a different context. For example, Puritanism - you can always count on some group of people believing their way of life and thinking is one and only morally right way of thinking, and the others deserved to be punis
      • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @08:06AM (#63238814)
        Wow, rolling back to before the nation was founded? Okay, well, then you're going to have to condemn the Democratic Party for starting the Civil War, founding the KKK and instituting Jim Crowe.
        • Some people do. They are stock in 21st century thinking that because the southern conservatives (segregationists) were universally Democrats that therefore the Democrats of 2013 are racists today. Some are so confused by all this that they've even called the segregationists "liberal", which frankly says bad things for education in the US.

        • Sure, but this is a stupid standpoint to take, no matter how you swing it.

          The "Democratic Party" is just a name for one of the groups in our two-party system. It's not some constitutionally ascribed collection of political thought.
          These days, the "Democratic Party" is composed mostly of liberals. In those times, it was not.
          Trying to make historical judgements of people based on the naming of their umbrella today is... like weirdly stupid.

          You'd be hard pressed to say the folks in the Republican Party r
      • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @08:14AM (#63238826)

        Well, classic conservatives are not habitual complainers and can well be constructive. These people are not classic conservatives and many are not conservatives at all. Just take a typical catalog of conservative core values and compare these people against it.

        Populists on the other hand, which are one of the most destructive political force known to man, are always about manufactured and artificially inflated grievances, conspiracy theories and other fantasies. They have nothing real to offer, to they need a whole, complex set of made-up things they can claim they would fix. And many of them are habitual liars and many of their followers are not intellectually capable to recognize that or to understand what it means.

        Incidentally, from an European perspective, the US Democrats are pretty strongly conservative and the Republican are right-wing extremists that mostly do not actually qualify as merely conservative anymore. Conservatives are rational and you can work with them and make the whole work for everybody. Extremists and populists you cannot work with and they make everything worse for everybody.

        • from an European perspective, the US Democrats are pretty strongly conservative and the Republican are right-wing extremists that mostly do not actually qualify as merely conservative anymore

          Oh yeah, absolutely. The Democrats are thoroughly corporate-owned. People don't seem to realize that's literally the road to fascism. They oughta read Space Merchants or Snow Crash to get some perspective on why letting corporations run everything would be soul-destroying. Or maybe just read up on the actions of United Fruit, or even Coca-Cola, for some real world examples.

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            Indeed. Although this is worse than fascism. Fascists at least have some values (no matter how screwed up), corporatism has none.

            • Indeed. Although this is worse than fascism. Fascists at least have some values (no matter how screwed up), corporatism has none.

              I dunno - some might argue that greed, opportunism, and disingenuousness are values...

        • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

          by lilTimmy ( 6807660 )
          As Canadians the Republicans seem super right wing. That and they have literally no policies other than culture war BS. Waaah, they're coming for your Christmas. Baaah, they're teaching CRT to children (they're not). They're grooming your kids!!!! Oh, ignore Matt Gaetz over there in the corner. Those allegations are all made up.
          • by Anonymous Coward
            Let's not get started on Republican paedos!
            Republican anti-abortion activist Howard Scott Heldreth is a convicted child rapist in Florida. Republican County Commissioner David Swartz pleaded guilty to molesting two girls under the age of 11 and was sentenced to 8 years in prison. Republican judge Mark Pazuhanich pleaded no contest to fondling a 10-year old girl and was sentenced to 10 years probation. Republican anti-abortion activist Nicholas Morency pleaded guilty to possessing child pornography on
          • Because the Republican party has been co-opted. Starting mostly back with the Moral Majority (who were neither) deciding to explicitly mix politics into religion. So they promise to deliver votes to the party if they promise to pay attention to their heaven and earth shattering issues. Over time that wing has grown, and now it's pretty dominant especially as more typical fiscal conservatives are being shunted being has-beens. This really is a socially conservative party now, theire economic agenda does not

        • by jwdb ( 526327 )

          Incidentally, from an European perspective, the US Democrats are pretty strongly conservative and the Republican are right-wing extremists that mostly do not actually qualify as merely conservative anymore.

          That gets said a lot here but is only partially true, and more so in an economic sense than a social one. There's a number of important social issues where the US Democratic party is to the left of the average European, for instance on gender identity attitudes, abortion rights, and immigration. Also dep

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            I am not sure about that. Gender Identity? Basically it is "nobody minds but nobody cares much either". For example, I never have heard of any instance of the bizarre "restroom" debate that seems to flare up in the US again and again. Abortion rights are pretty much there permanently, except for a few countries that have too many catholics to be rational. Immigration? Well. Nobody actually knows. The NGOs that do high-sea rescue for all those that think crossing a rather large body of water in an inflatable

            • by jwdb ( 526327 )

              I agree on the "it's complicated". What I mainly object to is that the Democratic party would be seen as right-wing, when in actuality it's far more complicated.

              On gender identity, Europe is pushing back noticeably on affirmative care (the norm in the US), and it's not just the conservative religious countries doing so. On abortion, yes they're a fact, but in many (if not most) EU countries they're also more restrictive than what most states had under Roe, and what the Progressive caucus would like. On immi

        • I agree insofar as the words we use in this context do not help anymore. I am a “conservative”..for a Canadian. That most often puts me as more small-l liberal than most US democrats. Even I hate the word conservative- I don’t feel conservative in any fashion except for the need to be prudent (not tight) on fiscal policy. And nothing about that feels political, just pragmatic..you don’t want to find out what happens to your country once bond markets consider you a heightened risk. He
      • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @09:26AM (#63238970)

        The Dixie Chicks circa 2003 were the victims of cancel culture and blacklisted overnight.

        • That's more due to the type of music they performed. If your audience is primarily conservative and you make comments alienating them, that is a foolish business decision (but a respectable moral one.)

          The problem with modern cancel culture is that, usually, the ones calling for the cancel do not even watch/listen to the person they are trying to cancel.

          • Eh.
            You're splitting hairs.

            All humans have engaged in "cancel culture" since the dawn of fucking time.
            People build groups to economically isolate people they don't fucking like.

            Declaring a "modern twist" that's mostly a result of how connected society is now as "the problem" is laughably naive, or flat out disingenuous.
            The result is the same: You can only economically harm a group via the group that agrees with you.
        • What a great example to bring up. Solet’s be honest - it was a concerted effort to inflict consequences on someone because of their political beliefs. Just a quick look at their monthly Spotify streaming numbers - just as suspected, truly they did not suffer consequence there. Do you realistically think even one human being at all has stopped listening to someone’s music because of such a campaign (even those up publicly vocal about it)? Nope. Fast forward 20 years, seems Kanye is more popular t
    • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @07:00AM (#63238744)

      Ultimately, more than 100 committees of both parties signed up for the program, said Google spokesman Jose Castaneda. The RNC was not one of them, ...

      They would have had one less thing to complain about. Grievance is their bread and butter now.

      They're training their people to play the role of victims.

      • Which you can see because they still harp about white Christian males being the most persecuted people on the planet, despite that group holding the vast majority of the power and wealth. But victimhood brings in the votes.

      • While I can agree with that perspective, I’d call it more of a persecution complex for republicans/ right wing. On the left, it’s a true “victim mentality”, and primarily because status is achieved with victim credentials. It’s like your Ivy League school CV if you have enough “intersections” of victim hood.
    • Some people already feel like they're being persecuted by not being allowed to be a bother to others.

      • Some people already feel like they're being persecuted by not being allowed to be a bother to others.

        I can see that... Like "Religious Freedom" means being able to impose your beliefs, and will, on others and/or deny them theirs.

    • I can not wait to see !!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    How can I keep it as spam. Already in my spam box, there's been several emails from Trump. I don't care to see any of this bullshit in my inbox, from either side.

    • Just do nothing. The article is saying they are stopping the pilot program that allowed those emails to pass through the filters.
  • The enormous exceptions for political speech in laws like the CANSPAM Act are only one of the reasons the laws do not, and can not, work.

  • And how much does it cost to bypass it?

  • by unami ( 1042872 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @07:55AM (#63238796)
    even if it's more driven by business than by ethics: Campaign emails are just spam. I'd rather get emails about penis enlargement or that nigerian prince.
  • by lamber45 ( 658956 ) <lamber45@msu.edu> on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @08:06AM (#63238812) Homepage Journal
  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @08:19AM (#63238830)
    Rather, at least the people who run the GOP's email marketing campaigns are at fault here. They're spamming. They send way too many emails, mostly from the same servers, overload the recipients who then delete or ignore the messages, leading to the messages being marked as spam.

    The GOP needs to hire someone else.

    • Good luck! Do you really think people want to receive DNC marketing emails?

      It's not a Republican vs. Democrat issue, nor is it a marketing strategy issue. A political party attempting to win over people or raise money by sending emails...is engaging in spam, period.

      • by spitzak ( 4019 )

        Obviously nobody wants to get DNC marketing emails.

        If the GOP's claims were correct then Democrats should have reason to complain, as Google's spam filter is not working as well for them as for Republicans.

        I think the GP is saying that the GOP is sending out far more fundraising emails. If this is true, they can disingeneously say that Google is blocking more of them, even if the percentage blocked is the same or lower. Don't know if this is really true.

        I get a lot of annoying crap from democrats as SMS spa

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @08:47AM (#63238886)

    If these emails are not exempted from spam rules, does it mean that if enough people flag them as spam that they get sent to the spam folder for everyone? Or just the people marking them as spam? I could see how the former could lead to all kinds of dirty tricks where people sign up for news letters & such just to flag them as spam to effectively kill that stuff landing in anyone's inbox.

    • by Major_Disorder ( 5019363 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @12:35PM (#63239502)

      If these emails are not exempted from spam rules, does it mean that if enough people flag them as spam that they get sent to the spam folder for everyone? Or just the people marking them as spam? I could see how the former could lead to all kinds of dirty tricks where people sign up for news letters & such just to flag them as spam to effectively kill that stuff landing in anyone's inbox.

      The people who would do such a thing are usually referred to as "Heros".

  • I get a half dozen emails a day that are pure unsolicited commercial shit but use my name and sometimes include an unsubscribe. The problem is getting steadily worse.
    • A lot is being driven by Google. Tons of spammers use their systems since there's no monitored abuse mail box to report spammers to (wtf??). Also Salesforce is bad at ignoring abuse. These days I just whitelist friends who have Gmail or Gapps and send the rest to spam. I don't like sorbs policies, but their rbl can serve as a good baseline for doing spam folder filter, then bolstered with other more targeted rbls with better policies for outright rejection. Basically using more aggressive filters (esp
      • Yep, it is why now my mail server does not accept email from gmail accounts unless on an accept list. gmail was at one time the gold standard. I got zero spam from them. A few years ago that changed, I'd send abuse reports to them and they just ignored them. So now, I ignore them.
    • The problem is stale e-mail accounts. Your information gets sold. You need to either set up aliases or use a wrapper service like DuckDuckGo's email privacy where you can create one-time e-mail addresses.

      I like to use a system where I create a new alias YYYY@mydomain.com every year and deactivate the previous year's alias. Humans should be able to intuitively increment the year counter whereas computers don't.

      My inbox is pretty dang clean even after years of having the same account (because I never give out

      • But you need an email for accounts too; billing/autopay; voicemail/notifications... so many places use your email address as the account name that you can't rotate emails without going to all of those and changing the email then verifying if they even allow you to change your account name at all.

        I find the separate email by use works pretty well while any volunteer or political or petition emails get heavily spammed rather quickly due to security holes at those orgs and them sharing their mailing lists. Th

    • I get about 150 spams a day to my gmail... the filter tends to catch all but about 5 or 6 of them.

  • ... both parties signed up for the program ...

    Anecdotal evidence says the DNC can type faster than the RNC, so the RNC will get a lot of campaign letters from their mortal enemies.

  • Poor Greg now needs all the help he can get! [house.gov]

    As many of you have heard, I was involved in an accident on my Sarasota property Wednesday afternoon and sustained several injuries. After spending three nights in Sarasota Memorial Hospital, I am grateful to be home and recovering. All praise and glory goes to God!

    Seeing that I might become a snow bird if I win the lottery, his spam mail has for the last 7 years kept me abreast of how wonderful the state of Florida is especially for Canadians who are white and

  • I pretty much was planning on blocking all gmail accounts/emails anyway due to the flood of spam from "valid" gmail accounts letting me know my GeekSquid subscription has been renewed or trying to sell me family re-union t-shirts.

  • I do not care, I abandoned gmail a year or 2 ago when it became a PITA for use with mutt. I moved the mailing lists I subscribed to to a new email on my domain.

    Will political ads get to me, not now, gmail can sit there building up unreads. I only use gmail now if I need to supply an email when ask by a WEB site.

  • Speak clearly, without an attempt to deceive or misdirect.

    Just look at whatever you consider the politically normal thing to do... then do the opposite.

    • So basically, stop writing emails asking people to donate, or explaining why they should support a particular party? OK, got it, I'm with you there!

  • by groobly ( 6155920 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @01:19PM (#63239660)

    As far as I'm concerned, all campaign mail is spam, unless I've agreed to it, which I haven't.

  • by kbahey ( 102895 ) on Wednesday January 25, 2023 @01:36PM (#63239714) Homepage

    This article details what Google did, yet republicans did not use that feature ... [theverge.com].

    • This article details what Google did, yet republicans did not use that feature ....

      Using the feature came with strings. Perhaps they found Google's requirements unacceptable.

  • I don't think the GOP will really get to the bottom of this issue until they've had a priest perform an exorcism on Google's GMail servers & then performed a seance to check that all the evil Democrat spirits have been sent back whence they came. Really, it's the only way.

Somebody ought to cross ball point pens with coat hangers so that the pens will multiply instead of disappear.

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