Monday, September 13, 2010

Making Money


















Comments


Subscribe to comments for this post OR Subscribe to comments for all ReadWriteWeb posts










  1. One thing you're missing here: Craigslist started charging for the Adult Services section at the request of previous Attorneys General with the idea that adding a charge that required a credit card would curtail the use of the section for illegal activities.



    http://www.scattorneygeneral.com/newsroom/pdf/2009/craigslist.pdf



    Posted by: Collin |
    September 8, 2010 6:04 PM




















  2. Ah! Makes sense. Updating the post. Thanks for bringing that to my attention.



     Posted by: Adrianne Jeffries |
    September 8, 2010 6:14 PM




















  3. I'm baffled as to why craigslist didn't see the profit issue ahead of time. I'm 100% behind them, but raking in millions just doesn't look good, and makes them an easy target. From day one of charging for Adult Services, they should have been giving 100% of that money to organizations that work to prevent sex trafficking and child prostitution, to make it 100% clear that the money was for filtering, not for profit.



     Posted by: Brad Weikel |
    September 8, 2010 6:17 PM




















  4. I think this is a good thing to do for Craiglist. But I bet that some thousands or maybe millions of dollars will be taken out from earnings in the industry with Craiglist ready to censor. LOL. Thanks for the info.



    Posted by: WebHosting Guru |
    September 8, 2010 7:09 PM




















  5. I'm baffled how an article on ReadWriteWeb could miss the obvious question of free speech on the internet.



    What you have here is public officials (facing re-election) using their office as a pulpit, making legal threats they know to be unenforceable, and lying to the media in order to prohibit speech which they know to be legal. State AGs are literally using a public relations campaign to circumvent an Act of Congress intended to curtail their power against just *this* kind of electioneering. That the AGs happen to be exploiting victimized children in their media campaign is almost incidental to the larger attack on the law and Constitution.



    The Communications Decency Act protects electronic publishers from liability for content produced by users of the system. Absent that immunity there could be no Google, no Blogspot, no Facebook, no WordPress.com, no Digg or Reddit, no Twitter and no comments (like this one) on ReadWriteWeb.



    The moralistic campaigns against 4chan and craigslist all lead to one inevitable conclusion: the publishers of ReadWriteWeb will be criminally and civilly liable for the comments of this community.



    Here's a concept that's new: Has anyone ever substantiated the claims that Craigslist has ever been used for child or human trafficking? Is there even one demonstrable case of this occurring? If not, then the site may have just established millions of dollars in damages for a defamation suit against it's detractors. Yes, Craigslist is a public person, that doesn't mean they can't be defamed: they just have to prove damages.



    Posted by: Baffled |
    September 8, 2010 10:04 PM




















  6. Mobile phone carriers should be banned to provide a phone number to prostitutes as they are also making tons of money from an illegale activity.



    Same thing for people selling cloth, sex toys, etc.



    Posted by: idont |
    September 9, 2010 9:21 AM























  7. eric seiger

    Monday, Sept. 13, 2010 Headlines | Albuquerque, New Mexico | KRQE <b>...</b>

    Latest Albuquerque news. Local news from Santa Fe, Durango, Farmington, Roswell, New Mexico from KRQE News 13.,

    Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 9/13 - Arrowhead Pride

    Are you ready for some football? The Kansas City Chiefs finally get this thing started tonight. I know a lot of you will be at the game, I also know most of us can't make it. We will be there in spirit. Keep us in mind as you roar on ...

    Lady Gaga&#39;s MTV triumph – Entertainment <b>News</b> Bloginity.com

    Lady Gaga was the big winner at last night's (12.09.10) MTV Video Music Awards. The eccentric singer - who was nominated for a record 13 awards - took home an impressive eight trophies at the prestigious ceremony, including Video of the ...





















No comments:

Post a Comment