This afternoon I received a posting from a firm called GovTrends. I wanted to verify. Sorry, I don't take them at face value. Plus, it was pretty pathetic that, once again, Smith's people just chose to not speak with me. At the same time, I had been waiting for this to happen. The tech that found the problem had even said they would try to pull this, but not really believable.
I went ahead and called them, after seeing that their site said:
GovTrends is a full service web studio and online strategy firm focused on serving high profile political and corporate clients.
Whenever I see the word "Stategy", that comes to close to being a "persuasion" firm, like Targeted Creative Communications.
They verified they run websites for other members of Congress. I asked who they were, they refused to tell me, saying "it's confidential". Doesn't matter that they are being paid with my tax dollars to set up and manage official government websites. Doesn't matter that every dollar spent by members of Congress through their office is public information, and hence, so is who they are giving it to. That arguement didn't really budge the guy. He just told me to send an email request, then, and they'd do some tests first. That perked up my interest. In other words, were they going to fix it? How, I don't know, but his refusal to be cooperative in verifying what he said sure didn't sit right.
He said, as you can see, their servers are set by default. He kept on wanting to tell me about some site on the internet that tells about the biggest spammers, and that blogspot.com was one of them. I told him I didn't care about that.
So, we have Smith's office continuing to refuse to comment on this, and a provider wanting us to take them at face value.
So let's look at some of the clients that they serve, as noted on their site:
- JP Morgan
- NYC Health
- Sirius Satellite
- Snapple
- Godiva Chocolatier
- WebMD
- Wharton: University of Pennsylvania
- The Bahamas
So far, their own site and the ones I've tested that I can see they run have all been accessible through Blogspot.com. So, that leads to the question: Is this automatic blocking only occuring on servers for members of Congress? Is that even believable? And just how many members of Congress do they actually work for since they're not providing a list?