A Google spokesman vehemently denied Thursday that President Obama's 2012 campaign got early access to a new advertising program, claiming a sales rep who suggested as much was just plain wrong.
The technology in question, called "cost-per-lead," charges clients for every time a piece of personal information is collected from users. A staff member at the National Republican Senatorial Committee thought he was looking at an early version of the program after he saw an Obama ad on the site RealClearPolitics last month and emailed Google about the possibility of getting in on the action.
The sales rep did little to extinguish his notion, writing back to the NRSC claiming "select" clients had already signed up.
"This is a pre-alpha product that is being released to a select few clients. I'd be happy to get you into the beta if you're interested," Google's Sirene Abou-Chakra wrote, according to an email sent to the NRSC and obtained by FoxNews.com. Abou-Chakra pegged the entry-level "commitment" for the program at $10,000-$15,000.
Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt told FoxNews.com that the Obama campaign did not purchase any of the ads through Google. Google's press office also denied that the president's reelection effort got any early deal, considering the "cost-per-lead" program has not even been rolled out yet.
Google spokesman Jake Parrillo said the ad spotted by the NRSC was absolutely not a Google ad.
"We have never ... run or given away (cost-per-lead) ads to any political candidate," he said. "Full stop."
Asked why the sales rep would have claimed a "pre-alpha product" was out on the market, he replied: "She made a mistake."
Google apparently has been trying to clear the air after Politico.com first reported on the email exchange with the NRSC. NRSC spokesman Brian Walsh told FoxNews.com that Google has reached out to the committee to explain.
"They claim this was a misunderstanding," Walsh said in an email. "We are currently examining that but certainly the appearance raises a red flag when you consider that Google executives have contributed almost a million dollars to President Obama's political campaigns."
Google's former CEO Eric Schmidt is a member of the president's Council of Advisers on Science and Technology.
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