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Without question, Search is one of the most important and utilized services on the Internet.  If you look at the <a href="http://www.alexa.com/topsites" target="_blank">ten most-visited websites</a> according to Alexa.com, domains known for web search occupy the #1, #2, #5, and #10 spots (Google, Yahoo, Windows Live, and Baidu, respectively).  Usually when people search, they are looking for an answer to a question they have.
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Without question, Search is one of the most important and utilized services on the Internet.  If you look at the [http://www.alexa.com/topsites ten most-visited websites] according to Alexa.com, domains known for web search occupy the #1, #2, #5, and #10 spots (Google, Yahoo, Windows Live, and Baidu, respectively).  Usually when people search, they are looking for an answer to a question they have.
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This fact has prompted several corporate players to enter into what I might call "the answer enterprise".  I myself was no stranger to the answer enterprise.  Since graduate school, I noted how many of my friends and relatives marveled at how proficient I was in using various Internet search tools (back then, I'd go to <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/19961023234707/http://www.webcrawler.com/" target="_blank">Webcrawler</a> and <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/19961023234631/http://altavista.digital.com/" target="_blank">AltaVista</a> -- remember those?) and finding electronic databases that might help answer complex questions.  After I realized that some of these question-and-answer journeys were taking over an hour to fulfill properly, my entrepreneurial instincts kicked in.
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This fact has prompted several corporate players to enter into what I might call "the answer enterprise".  I myself was no stranger to the answer enterprise.  Since graduate school, I noted how many of my friends and relatives marveled at how proficient I was in using various Internet search tools (back then, I'd go to [http://web.archive.org/web/19961023234707/http://www.webcrawler.com/ Webcrawler] and [http://web.archive.org/web/19961023234631/http://altavista.digital.com/ AltaVista] -- remember those?) and finding electronic databases that might help answer complex questions.  After I realized that some of these question-and-answer journeys were taking over an hour to fulfill properly, my entrepreneurial instincts kicked in.
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<strong>Facts On Call</strong>
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==Facts On Call==
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Thus, in 1995, I incorporated <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20021125075325/http://www.factsoncall.com/" target="_blank">Facts On Call</a>.  For nine years with this side-project of mine, I learned about everything under the sun, assisting typically small enterprises and entrepreneurs with questions usually related to making a business case.  Some examples:
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Thus, in 1995, I incorporated [http://web.archive.org/web/20021125075325/http://www.factsoncall.com/ Facts On Call].  For nine years with this side-project of mine, I learned about everything under the sun, assisting typically small enterprises and entrepreneurs with questions usually related to making a business case.  Some examples:
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
 
     <li> What are the total number of athletic scholarships awarded in North America, the total number of junior college athletes, and the total number of professional athletes?  (Asked by a promotion agency for high school athletes.)</li>
 
     <li> What are the total number of athletic scholarships awarded in North America, the total number of junior college athletes, and the total number of professional athletes?  (Asked by a promotion agency for high school athletes.)</li>
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As the web matured and consumers began to learn search retrieval techniques that essentially were my competitive advantage, I began to wind down Facts On Call to focus more on marketing consulting and publishing, and my primary career in market research.  Once I heard the fifth or sixth individual ask me, "Why would someone pay you to search for stuff on the Internet, when they could just do it themselves for free?", it confirmed in my mind that paid information retrieval (at least from freely available sources) was a dead end.
 
As the web matured and consumers began to learn search retrieval techniques that essentially were my competitive advantage, I began to wind down Facts On Call to focus more on marketing consulting and publishing, and my primary career in market research.  Once I heard the fifth or sixth individual ask me, "Why would someone pay you to search for stuff on the Internet, when they could just do it themselves for free?", it confirmed in my mind that paid information retrieval (at least from freely available sources) was a dead end.
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<strong>Google Answers</strong>
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==Google Answers==
    
Google seemed to think otherwise.  In April 2002, they unveiled Google Answers, a fee-based question and answer clearinghouse.  An earlier attempt by Google to run an answer farm using only paid staffers failed after being inundated with questions during the first day or two.  That led to the "crowdsourced" version, where a panel of about 500 registered "researchers" would tackle questions in exchange for payments of $4 to $50, which was promptly expanded to a range anchored at $2 and at $200.  Those posting a query were charged a non-refundable fee of 50 cents, and Google pocketed 25% of the final payment to successful respondents.
 
Google seemed to think otherwise.  In April 2002, they unveiled Google Answers, a fee-based question and answer clearinghouse.  An earlier attempt by Google to run an answer farm using only paid staffers failed after being inundated with questions during the first day or two.  That led to the "crowdsourced" version, where a panel of about 500 registered "researchers" would tackle questions in exchange for payments of $4 to $50, which was promptly expanded to a range anchored at $2 and at $200.  Those posting a query were charged a non-refundable fee of 50 cents, and Google pocketed 25% of the final payment to successful respondents.
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After passing a <a href="https://answers.google.com/answers/researchertraining.html" target="_blank">relatively simple test</a> of search and writing skills, one could join another <a href="http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&amp;safe=off&amp;num=100&amp;q=factsoncall-ga+site%3Aanswers.google.com&amp;btnG=Search"></a> 500 designated researchers. As an observer, a bounty-posting questioner, and an occasional answerer, my memory of the program is as follows:
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After passing a [https://answers.google.com/answers/researchertraining.html relatively simple test] of search and writing skills, one could join another [http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&amp;safe=off&amp;num=100&amp;q=factsoncall-ga+site%3Aanswers.google.com&amp;btnG=Search">] 500 designated researchers. As an observer, a bounty-posting questioner, and an occasional answerer, my memory of the program is as follows:
    
(1) Most of the questions that could be researched and answered within 10 minutes were:
 
(1) Most of the questions that could be researched and answered within 10 minutes were:
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Another memory I have of the program was a problem of withheld payments.  If someone wasn't satisfied with the answer received, they could walk away from the deal -- even if the answer they were given was in fact comprehensive and thorough.  I heard that attempts to follow up to rectify any shortfalls were often met with silence from the client, and Google supported the policy that the customer is always right, regardless of how thorough an answer may have been.
 
Another memory I have of the program was a problem of withheld payments.  If someone wasn't satisfied with the answer received, they could walk away from the deal -- even if the answer they were given was in fact comprehensive and thorough.  I heard that attempts to follow up to rectify any shortfalls were often met with silence from the client, and Google supported the policy that the customer is always right, regardless of how thorough an answer may have been.
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I eventually decided to never again work within <em>that</em> system, and in a couple more years (late 2006), the service was terminated.  Yahoo! had recently launched a competing free service called...
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I eventually decided to never again work within ''that'' system, and in a couple more years (late 2006), the service was terminated.  Yahoo! had recently launched a competing free service called...
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<strong>Yahoo! Answers</strong>
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==Yahoo! Answers==
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Launched in very late 2005, <a href="http://answers.yahoo.com/" target="_blank">Yahoo! Answers</a> became the <a href="http://money.cnn.com/magazines/business2/business2_archive/2006/09/01/8384345/" target="_blank">second-most popular</a> reference website after Wikipedia in less than a year's time.  Seeded with "Featured Questions" to get the juices flowing, in the earliest days these might have included questions such as:
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Launched in very late 2005, [http://answers.yahoo.com/ Yahoo! Answers] became the [http://money.cnn.com/magazines/business2/business2_archive/2006/09/01/8384345/ second-most popular] reference website after Wikipedia in less than a year's time.  Seeded with "Featured Questions" to get the juices flowing, in the earliest days these might have included questions such as:
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
     <li>Are all <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20051220075200/http://answers.yahoo.com/" target="_blank">snowflakes</a> really different?</li>
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     <li>Are all [http://web.archive.org/web/20051220075200/http://answers.yahoo.com/ snowflakes] really different?</li>
     <li>What's your favorite <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20051211040657/http://answers.yahoo.com/" target="_blank">chocolate</a> recipe?</li>
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     <li>What's your favorite [http://web.archive.org/web/20051211040657/http://answers.yahoo.com/ chocolate] recipe?</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
The database allows anonymous posters to ask questions for free, and it allows any registered user to respond to questions (under the "free" model, which means people doing substantially meritorious work get paid the exact same amount as a prankster posting jokes -- not a dime).  Why would people contribute time and effort for free?  It would seem that the elaborate grading system that awards "points" to players participating in the knowledge marketplace is sufficient enticement to keep the site populated.
 
The database allows anonymous posters to ask questions for free, and it allows any registered user to respond to questions (under the "free" model, which means people doing substantially meritorious work get paid the exact same amount as a prankster posting jokes -- not a dime).  Why would people contribute time and effort for free?  It would seem that the elaborate grading system that awards "points" to players participating in the knowledge marketplace is sufficient enticement to keep the site populated.
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</tr>
 
</tr>
 
</tbody></table>
 
</tbody></table>
For the past few months, I myself have been asking questions and contributing answers to Yahoo! queries in the categories I'm most adept -- market research, travel, and Wikipedia.  I admit, it is predictably addictive to see myself rise up from nowhere to (currently) the <a href="http://answers.yahoo.com/dir/stars?sid=2115500146" target="_blank">fifth best</a> contributor on a topic.  But, I have ulterior motives, too.  By watching and answering questions, I've been building up some material for this very Akahele article, while occasionally posting a link to other Akahele articles, when appropriate.
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For the past few months, I myself have been asking questions and contributing answers to Yahoo! queries in the categories I'm most adept -- market research, travel, and Wikipedia.  I admit, it is predictably addictive to see myself rise up from nowhere to (currently) the [http://answers.yahoo.com/dir/stars?sid=2115500146 fifth best] contributor on a topic.  But, I have ulterior motives, too.  By watching and answering questions, I've been building up some material for this very Akahele article, while occasionally posting a link to other Akahele articles, when appropriate.
    
<strong>Lost souls</strong>
 
<strong>Lost souls</strong>
   −
From my recent experience, I have found both the questions and most of the answers delivered on the Yahoo! platform to reveal a careless level of engagement at best, to an appalling lack of sensibility at worst.  Indeed, Jacob Leibenluft <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2179393/pagenum/all/" target="_blank">writing in <em>Slate</em></a> called Yahoo! Answers "every middle-school teacher's worst nightmare about the Web".
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From my recent experience, I have found both the questions and most of the answers delivered on the Yahoo! platform to reveal a careless level of engagement at best, to an appalling lack of sensibility at worst.  Indeed, Jacob Leibenluft [http://www.slate.com/id/2179393/pagenum/all/ writing in ''Slate''] called Yahoo! Answers "every middle-school teacher's worst nightmare about the Web".
    
As I look at the site at this moment, the featured question is, "How do I bond with my rats?"  I found the next featured question even more astounding: "How much should i charge for painting a fence?"  Not an awful question, but in the details, the guy making the query points out that the fence is post-and-rail, and that the fence runs for 11,000 feet.  If you were a landowner with a two-mile fence, would you want your contractor going to Yahoo! Answers to ask strangers how to estimate the job?  That's a bit scary.
 
As I look at the site at this moment, the featured question is, "How do I bond with my rats?"  I found the next featured question even more astounding: "How much should i charge for painting a fence?"  Not an awful question, but in the details, the guy making the query points out that the fence is post-and-rail, and that the fence runs for 11,000 feet.  If you were a landowner with a two-mile fence, would you want your contractor going to Yahoo! Answers to ask strangers how to estimate the job?  That's a bit scary.
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Wait.  It's not as scary as the "<a href="http://answers.yahoo.com/dir/;_ylt=AlDqXDhDxp9NtXTiF.Xq3Pzpy6IX;_ylv=3?link=list&amp;sid=396546046" target="_blank">Pregnancy and Parenting</a>" category.  Today, I see the following questions there:<a class="subject l3" title="See more details on Brown Discharge????? Help!!!?" href="http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AuN77L5M.XgNvBocUMj.L1d37hR.;_ylv=3?qid=20090412185420AApVBvl"></a>
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Wait.  It's not as scary as the "[http://answers.yahoo.com/dir/;_ylt=AlDqXDhDxp9NtXTiF.Xq3Pzpy6IX;_ylv=3?link=list&amp;sid=396546046 Pregnancy and Parenting]" category.  Today, I see the following questions there:<a class="subject l3" title="See more details on Brown Discharge????? Help!!!?" href="http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AuN77L5M.XgNvBocUMj.L1d37hR.;_ylv=3?qid=20090412185420AApVBvl">]
<ul>
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    <li>Brown Discharge????? Help!!!?</li>
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:Brown Discharge????? Help!!!?
    <li>What first name would go with Joseph Cyplik?</li>
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:What first name would go with Joseph Cyplik?
    <li>When does conception occur?</li>
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:When does conception occur?
    <li>He's a deadbeat w/ his first child so will he be any different with a new baby?</li>
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:He's a deadbeat w/ his first child so will he be any different with a new baby?
</ul>
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Clearly, there is a general behavioral problem here, is there not?  Children and adults seeking advice seem wholly capable of reaching "answer" sites on the Internet.  But they exhibit an implicit trust with these sites, assessing them as (apparently) a completely appropriate channel for important advice.  They want advice and answers from people they don't know, who are using fictitious user names with cartoon avatars, who make no claim to know what the hell they're talking about.  What happened to the old advice, "talk to someone you trust and respect -- a parent, a teacher, a librarian, a doctor, a pastor"?
 
Clearly, there is a general behavioral problem here, is there not?  Children and adults seeking advice seem wholly capable of reaching "answer" sites on the Internet.  But they exhibit an implicit trust with these sites, assessing them as (apparently) a completely appropriate channel for important advice.  They want advice and answers from people they don't know, who are using fictitious user names with cartoon avatars, who make no claim to know what the hell they're talking about.  What happened to the old advice, "talk to someone you trust and respect -- a parent, a teacher, a librarian, a doctor, a pastor"?
   −
<strong>Building brands</strong>
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==Building brands==
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There are other answer enterprises out there.  Some borrow from the popular success of Wikipedia and try the wiki approach:  <a href="http://wiki.answers.com/" target="_blank">WikiAnswers</a> and the older, but far less popular Jimmy Wales-led site, <a href="http://answers.wikia.com/wiki/Wikianswers" target="_blank">Wikianswers</a>.  Amazing how an upper-case letter can keep lawsuits at bay.  I am reminded of the old <a href="http://www.linksandlaw.com/decisions-7.htm" target="_blank">Digital Equipment (Alta<strong>V</strong>ista) v. Alta<strong>v</strong>ista Technology</a> trademark dispute.
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There are other answer enterprises out there.  Some borrow from the popular success of Wikipedia and try the wiki approach:  [http://wiki.answers.com/ WikiAnswers] and the older, but far less popular Jimmy Wales-led site, [http://answers.wikia.com/wiki/Wikianswers Wikianswers].  Amazing how an upper-case letter can keep lawsuits at bay.  I am reminded of the old [http://www.linksandlaw.com/decisions-7.htm Digital Equipment (Alta<strong>V</strong>ista) v. Alta<strong>v</strong>ista Technology] trademark dispute.
   −
Yahoo! Answers features a program called <a href="http://answers.yahoo.com/info/knowledge_partners" target="_blank">Knowledge Partners</a>, where business organizations can flaunt their expertise -- oh, and also "mention its products or services, where relevant, in an answer".  So far, Yahoo! has invited Dell, Kraft, Purina, Quicken Loans, Entertainment Weekly, and a few others to participate.  The program "is currently in Beta and only available by invitation".  This seems like the next natural step in the downward slope of "progress" in the answer enterprise.
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Yahoo! Answers features a program called [http://answers.yahoo.com/info/knowledge_partners Knowledge Partners], where business organizations can flaunt their expertise -- oh, and also "mention its products or services, where relevant, in an answer".  So far, Yahoo! has invited Dell, Kraft, Purina, Quicken Loans, Entertainment Weekly, and a few others to participate.  The program "is currently in Beta and only available by invitation".  This seems like the next natural step in the downward slope of "progress" in the answer enterprise.
   −
<strong>You get what you pay for</strong>
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==You get what you pay for==
    
Facts On Call charged good money to provide good answers to good questions.  Google Answers charged meager money to provide good answers to good questions.  Yahoo! Answers charges no money to provide marginal answers to marginal questions, and you might even see a Knowledge Partner's product hawked in the process.
 
Facts On Call charged good money to provide good answers to good questions.  Google Answers charged meager money to provide good answers to good questions.  Yahoo! Answers charges no money to provide marginal answers to marginal questions, and you might even see a Knowledge Partner's product hawked in the process.
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<strong>Image credits:</strong>
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==Image credits:==
<ul>
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    <li>Facts On Call, Inc. logo used courtesy of Gregory Kohs, its creator.</li>
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*Facts On Call, Inc. logo used courtesy of Gregory Kohs, its creator.
    <li><span style="color: #000000;">Yahoo! Answers logo, <a title="Yahoo! Answers logo, Fair use" href="http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#107" target="_blank"><span class="comment">fair use doctrine</span></a>.</span></li>
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*<span style="color: #000000;">Yahoo! Answers logo, <a title="Yahoo! Answers logo, Fair use" href="http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#107 <span class="comment">fair use doctrine</span>].</span>
    
==Comments==
 
==Comments==
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11 Responses       to “        Searching for answers        ”
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===11 Responses to “Searching for answers”===
    
Comments RSS
 
Comments RSS
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Dan T.    
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====Dan T.====
 
I believe the Wikia answer subsite actually existed before its competitor, though it was pretty dormant until the other site came along.
 
I believe the Wikia answer subsite actually existed before its competitor, though it was pretty dormant until the other site came along.
    
As for “how do I bond with my rats”, did he try CrazyGlue?
 
As for “how do I bond with my rats”, did he try CrazyGlue?
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Gregory Kohs    
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 +
 
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====Gregory Kohs====
 
Dan T., I agree that the facts seem to indicate that the Wikia answer subsite DID pre-exist the Answers.com wiki.  I’d describe its early activity as “very dormant”.  Indeed, I found that Answers.com put forth extensive efforts to build and brand and market their site, all while Wikia’s site just sat there like a bump on a log.  Only after Answers.com found relative success with their site did Wikia seem to “wake up” and decide that they had had a similarly brilliant brand name, some longer period of time ago.  I have no remorse in describing the latter activity as “copycat”.
 
Dan T., I agree that the facts seem to indicate that the Wikia answer subsite DID pre-exist the Answers.com wiki.  I’d describe its early activity as “very dormant”.  Indeed, I found that Answers.com put forth extensive efforts to build and brand and market their site, all while Wikia’s site just sat there like a bump on a log.  Only after Answers.com found relative success with their site did Wikia seem to “wake up” and decide that they had had a similarly brilliant brand name, some longer period of time ago.  I have no remorse in describing the latter activity as “copycat”.
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Coincidentally, if a large company like Reuters or Encyclopedia Britannica were now to launch a brand called “Facts On Call”, I can assure you, I would not spend one minute of time fretting about it, because I chose to abandon claim to that brand.  As a matter of fact, even while Facts On Call was an active, incorporated entity, the New Jersey Lawyer publication launched a “Facts-on-call” fax service for court documents.  I chose to discuss the problem privately with them, without involving lawyers, and both brands co-existed without harm.
 
Coincidentally, if a large company like Reuters or Encyclopedia Britannica were now to launch a brand called “Facts On Call”, I can assure you, I would not spend one minute of time fretting about it, because I chose to abandon claim to that brand.  As a matter of fact, even while Facts On Call was an active, incorporated entity, the New Jersey Lawyer publication launched a “Facts-on-call” fax service for court documents.  I chose to discuss the problem privately with them, without involving lawyers, and both brands co-existed without harm.
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RFK    
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====RFK==== 
 
Do I remember AltaVista? – I’m still using it – and loving it!
 
Do I remember AltaVista? – I’m still using it – and loving it!
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MightyUnderdog    
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====MightyUnderdog====
 
Not to split hairs, but I thought Budvar was the original Bohemian brand, and is now distributed in North America as Czechvar.
 
Not to split hairs, but I thought Budvar was the original Bohemian brand, and is now distributed in North America as Czechvar.
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Gregory Kohs    
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 +
====Gregory Kohs====
 
Split hairs all you want.  It’s a long story, that as far as I can tell, actually has TWO main breweries in Bohemia competing for the name, and then Anheuser-Busch came into the story.
 
Split hairs all you want.  It’s a long story, that as far as I can tell, actually has TWO main breweries in Bohemia competing for the name, and then Anheuser-Busch came into the story.
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http://www.budweiser1795.com/index.php?s=2&a=1&l=2
 
http://www.budweiser1795.com/index.php?s=2&a=1&l=2
   −
Gregory Kohs    
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 +
 
 +
====Gregory Kohs====
 
I have been mildly upbraided by another observer whom I know and respect, and he’s right — I’m playing loose with the fact that Wikianswers did, indeed, pre-date WikiAnswers — so it is merely petty and unfair to say that Wikianswers is the “copycat” site.  I have modified accordingly the blog post above.
 
I have been mildly upbraided by another observer whom I know and respect, and he’s right — I’m playing loose with the fact that Wikianswers did, indeed, pre-date WikiAnswers — so it is merely petty and unfair to say that Wikianswers is the “copycat” site.  I have modified accordingly the blog post above.
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So, while the blog post is now corrected factually, I hope that this comment underscores that “first to a name” (which was never protected with a trademark) means little if your competition is a more enterprising operation capable of building a more popular and better-organized web destination.
 
So, while the blog post is now corrected factually, I hope that this comment underscores that “first to a name” (which was never protected with a trademark) means little if your competition is a more enterprising operation capable of building a more popular and better-organized web destination.
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Anthony DiPierro    
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====Anthony DiPierro====
 
Greg, I think you’re missing something quite key. Whitten claims to have registered wikianswers.com in June 2004.
 
Greg, I think you’re missing something quite key. Whitten claims to have registered wikianswers.com in June 2004.
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Al Tally    
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====Al Tally====
 
You could have discussed text-based answer services, such as http://www.text118118.com.
 
You could have discussed text-based answer services, such as http://www.text118118.com.
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Gregory Kohs    
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====Gregory Kohs====
 
Anthony:  You’re right.  In this Internet age, the “first to grab the .com domain name” is most of the battle for laying claim to “ownership” of a brand name.  If Whitten registered wikianswers.com in June 2004, and Answers.com bought the property from him, it does look rather silly for Answers.Wikia.com to say they were “first” to the word “Wikianswers”.  Considering my past interactions with the folks at Wikia.com (such as their hesitation and rudeness when I brought to their attention a group’s use of their servers to promote images of child abuse), I am not surprised by this evidence of false claim to “Wikianswers”.  Thanks for your research.
 
Anthony:  You’re right.  In this Internet age, the “first to grab the .com domain name” is most of the battle for laying claim to “ownership” of a brand name.  If Whitten registered wikianswers.com in June 2004, and Answers.com bought the property from him, it does look rather silly for Answers.Wikia.com to say they were “first” to the word “Wikianswers”.  Considering my past interactions with the folks at Wikia.com (such as their hesitation and rudeness when I brought to their attention a group’s use of their servers to promote images of child abuse), I am not surprised by this evidence of false claim to “Wikianswers”.  Thanks for your research.
    
Al: Yes, I could have and should have talked about other answer services.  My bad!  I have since discovered (and participate in) another sort of cool one — Vark.com (or, “Aardvark”).  The content of the questions & answers is typically unhelpful, but the way they ping you via Google Chat for answer help is pretty neat.
 
Al: Yes, I could have and should have talked about other answer services.  My bad!  I have since discovered (and participate in) another sort of cool one — Vark.com (or, “Aardvark”).  The content of the questions & answers is typically unhelpful, but the way they ping you via Google Chat for answer help is pretty neat.
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Gregory Kohs    
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 +
 
 +
====Gregory Kohs====
 
After producing 99 “Best Answers” and rising to the #3 top answerer in the Wikipedia category, my account on Yahoo! Answers has been suspended for “Terms of Service violations” that Yahoo’s form-letter system seems incapable of elaborating upon.  After the wiki-clique of teenagers there had gotten into the habit of “thumbs down” swarming on my answers, and for asking questions that personally attacked me (which the Yahoo! TOS folks seemed unresponsive to my take-down requests), I did admittedly begin to game the system with 4 sockpuppet accounts that I would use for voting up my answers.  The wiki-clique retaliated with what appears to be about 8 or 9 sockpuppet accounts, swarming on “their” favorite answer — which produced fairly ridiculous voting outcomes like this:
 
After producing 99 “Best Answers” and rising to the #3 top answerer in the Wikipedia category, my account on Yahoo! Answers has been suspended for “Terms of Service violations” that Yahoo’s form-letter system seems incapable of elaborating upon.  After the wiki-clique of teenagers there had gotten into the habit of “thumbs down” swarming on my answers, and for asking questions that personally attacked me (which the Yahoo! TOS folks seemed unresponsive to my take-down requests), I did admittedly begin to game the system with 4 sockpuppet accounts that I would use for voting up my answers.  The wiki-clique retaliated with what appears to be about 8 or 9 sockpuppet accounts, swarming on “their” favorite answer — which produced fairly ridiculous voting outcomes like this:
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What a fascinating experiment for me, and what an utter disgrace is the Yahoo! system of governance on that particular community.
 
What a fascinating experiment for me, and what an utter disgrace is the Yahoo! system of governance on that particular community.
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Gregory Kohs    
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 +
 
 +
====Gregory Kohs====
 
This Yahoo! question and answer are worth sharing: http://imgur.com/4tdCP.jpg
 
This Yahoo! question and answer are worth sharing: http://imgur.com/4tdCP.jpg
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