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October 3, 2008 5:49 PM PDT

Hanky-panky distorts Obama iPhone app results

by Stephen Shankland
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The Obama iPhone call tally as of 4:33 p.m. Oct. 3.

The Obama iPhone call tally as of 4:33 p.m. Oct. 3.

(Credit: CNET News)

It looks like either somebody drinks a lot of coffee and talks really fast, or somebody diddled with the results of the phone recruitment feature in the Barack Obama campaign's iPhone application.

When I tried the application before 8 a.m. PDT Thursday, only 12 calls had been made, and the top-ranked caller had made 6 of them. But 30 hours later, the top caller had made 9,648 calls, according to the application.

That works out to more than five calls per minute, which means somebody would have been spending less than 12 seconds per call on average. And it accounted for nearly half of the 22,597 calls made by 4:33 p.m. Friday.

But by 5:41 p.m., the top caller had made a more reasonable 48 calls and the total calls dropped to 13,076, the software reported, so it looks like the application engineers figured out what happened and updated the statistics.

The Democratic presidential candidate's campaign released the iPhone application on Thursday. Its most notable feature lists who on a person's contact list lives in key battleground states at the top and keeps track of who's been called to keep track of recruiting efforts.

Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank.
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