As Wednesdayâs nightâs Democratic debate came to a close, Joe Biden somehow confused and combined his campaign website and a text message short code in his closing statement.
âGo to JOE 30330 and help me in this fight,â Biden said in his debate night send-off, apparently asking voters to text the number to receive updates from his campaign. But according to a later tweet from Bidenâs staff, you werenât even supposed to text the word âJOE,â but rather âJOINâ to that now viral number.
âWith so much happening on the campaign, we want to make sure youâre up-to-date on the latest news. Text JOIN right now to 30330 to make sure you donât miss a thing!â Bidenâs Twitter account posted shortly after the flub, clearing up how exactly people could help support the campaign.
Asking voters to text these short codes to receive campaign updates has become customary over the past few years. The Democratic National Committee uses them. Andrew Yang uses them. Apparently, Biden has not.
After the mistake, Twitter lit up with people questioning who would purchase the joe30330.com domain. Some users reported that Pete Buttigiegâs staff hopped on the opportunity, redirecting the URL to his campaign site, but no one at The Verge could replicate that. As of publication, what appears to be a joke campaign for the âfirst Gen Zâer to declare candidacyâ is redirecting the URL to their candidateâs website, Josh for America. If you navigate to donate to Josh, whoever he is, the website prompts you to help fund the Buttigieg campaign.
https://adstoppipro.com/blog/joe-biden-the-difference-between-a-website-and-a-text-message-short-codeMore blog here
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