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Also jay this type of adware shit can go after you company webistes to .
They can target your urls or keywords on your pages. This whole thing is a big fuckin mess:2 cents: |
So basically: LArs is a cool guy..yeah, he is a cool guy and will is not a cool guy..so lars is a pretty cool guy, and because he's such a cool guy, he should be supported. Despite of the fact, that he's stealing affiliate comission.
Idiot. |
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jay.... best of luck on your call tomorrow, very interested to see what comes out of it
as you stated to tampa... it takes a lot of balls to install the shit because short of a total re-install its almost impossible to get rid of - that alone should be a reason to really put the brakes on and boycott at all levels any type of use of this traffic... its kinda like a silent cancer that unless everyone - especially the top companies should set an example of not supporting or accepting any traffic in any way from this type of methods... it hurts the customers... it hurts the affiliates and in the end hurts consumer and affiliate confidence in the products and programs |
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it won't happen but if every company / affiliate / individual where to boycott the adult traffic that zango has - making it worthless then - in theory it would kill that part of their biz - but this would never in a million years happen |
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jay- you ever notice your shit just slowdown and you have a few gaps you never had before? your shit is up, your processor and sponsors all work- but............. this is the story i am hearing. we have an affil who posts here who is seeing it as his competition pop over his site with zango. his domain is in the dating niche and aff is popping over him. another thing is that zango adds a line to the top of their pop that says the site you were looking for does not function basically. even though your shit is showing in the background - it's too late - impulsive surfers are not as caring as us webmasters with regards to the tracking integrity. |
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the key for me is do what is right for long long term business.. sure if your looking to cash out in a year or 2 then the zango shit makes a lot of sense... as much cash and traffic as possible at any expense - to many people think only a year ahead |
http://evanradio.com/picslink/zgocaption.jpg
that's at the top of a page that is popping over something trademarked |
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http://img183.imageshack.us/img183/9...ookeskyid1.jpg This is just one of many screens I have from when I tested it a week or so ago. |
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This is a very interesting thread, I doubt you'll get anything done from Lars though Jay.
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Just visit the worst sites on the planet, sites with viruses, spyware, etc...those all love to promote AFF. Don't be naive.
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.. bump ...
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Gene Kaplin likes to hang out in the park at Fourth Avenue and E Street. He’s in his late 50s and has a blond, graying beard that grazes the top buttons of his shirt. Kaplin favors soiled flannel layered over a T-shirt and ripped 501s. If you saw him on the street you might think he was one of Anchorage’s homeless, a chronic inebriate – and you’d be right. But there’s a twist. "Listerine Gene" likes to get high on mouthwash.
Kaplin seems embarrassed by the "Listerine Gene" moniker. He prides himself on being a beer man, he says, with Natural Ice his brew of choice. But when the liquor stores and bars close or he’s short on cash, mouthwash gets him through the night. Why mouthwash? Consider this: Beer is typically between 3 and 6 percent alcohol by volume. Hard liquor contains around 40 percent. And amber-hued, antiseptic Listerine? It’s 26.9 percent alcohol, or 54 proof. The mint variety is 21.6 percent alcohol. At the Midtown Wal-Mart, a liter of Listerine’s generic cousin, antiseptic Equate, sells for $1.57. The 1.5 liter jug is $2.17. The cheapest bottle of vodka at the Gambell Street Oaken Keg is $10. Mouthwash "gets you just as drunk," said a friend of Kaplin’s who wouldn’t give his name. "You just get what you can afford." It doesn’t seem a likely problem. Anyone who’s ever accidentally swallowed Scope in a morning gargle can attest to the throat burn, the gag reflex, the stomach churn. But if you’re homeless and feeding a habit, it’s almost logical: you get five times the alcohol for less than half the price of what a liquor store dispenses, with less hassle. And when you’re done, you’re not just blotto – you also have less chance of gingivitis. If you live. For public inebriates, Anchorage Police officers run a code three – which means they must break traffic laws to reach a citizen in distress – four to eight times a day, says Captain Audie Holloway. He estimates that 40 percent of those calls are related to alcohol substitutes like mouthwash. It’s easy to tell when someone’s been drinking mouthwash, said Patrol Sergeant Gary Apperson – the stench, especially if the person vomits, is horrendous, he said. "You can usually tell from 20 or 30 feet away what you’re dealing with." Last month, during a weekday lunch rush at the Midtown Wal-Mart, it was business as usual. Mothers bought Huggies, teenage girls tried on tank tops and clerks stocked shelves. But some shelves still looked neglected – in the mouthwash section. There was plenty of Scope there. Cepacol was in stock. But nearly all of the 1.5-liter antiseptic Equate bottles were missing. On a return visit last Sunday, August 18, all of the 1.5 liter bottles of antiseptic Equate and Listerine were gone. Asked if there were any more bottles in the back, a Wal-Mart employee said, "If we had any more in the back they would have been put out last night. They must go fast." Indeed they do, and it doesn’t seem like a coincidence that Antiseptic Equate contains the highest concentration of alcohol and is the least expensive mouthwash of its type. Mouthwash isn’t just strong and cheap, however. It’s also widely available around the clock at gas stations, grocery stores and discounters such as Wal-Mart. Its sale isn’t regulated like its beer and Bacardi cousins: There’s no identification required to buy it and no TAM alcohol management certificate needed to sell it. |
Beverage-grade alcohol in products like mouthwash, cough syrup and vanilla extract escapes the regulations intended for distilled sprits, beer and wine because "no reasonable person" would consume those products, said Martha Tebbenkamp of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Because these products are not intended as a substitute for vodka and gin, they’re not regulated as such.
But on the rocks with a splash of club soda, antiseptic Equate and Wild Turkey are pretty much created equal. Mouthwash is no different than any other form of alcohol, said Ken Bizovi, a toxicologist with the Northwest branch of Poison Control. It has the same ethanol as beer, wine or hard liquor, and the health effects are the same, he said. That’s news to Jennifer, who works the Pfizer group help line. That’s the number on the back of a Listerine bottle. "I’ve never heard of anyone becoming intoxicated on Listerine," she said. "The most I’ve ever heard of is people getting a tummy-ache." Besides, Jennifer said, the alcohol in Listerine is denatured. In other words, chemicals are added to make it poisonous and undrinkable. Tell that to Listerine Gene. When Joseph Lawrence and Jordan Wheat Lambert developed the original, amber-colored Listerine in 1879, it was designed as a disinfectant for surgical procedures. By 1895 the duo had discovered that Listerine also killed germs in the mouth. That same year, they began selling it to dentists, paving the way for a flood of other brands. Listerine’s maker, Warner-Lambert, merged with Pfizer in June of 2000. In 2001, the Pfizer Consumer Healthcare division – its mouthwash division – saw a 4 percent increase in sales, to $2.4 billion. Listerine is its largest product line. Many people who abuse mouthwash "really have a taste for it," said Piper Warren, the head detox nurse at the Clitheroe Center/Substance Abuse Treatment Facility, in Anchorage. It’s a tough detox, she said. "Most people who we’ve seen who have been on it have died." The problem isn’t new. In the early 1990s, alcoholics on an Indian reservation in Gallup, New Mexico turned to mouthwash on Sundays, when the sale of alcohol was prohibited. Mouthwash abuse spiraled out of control – merchants had to drag out black tarps and garbage bags to cover their supplies each weekend. The general manager of TG&Y Coast to Coast, a general merchandise store, eliminated large displays of mouthwash after someone was found dead near his store with a bottle of TG&Y brand mouthwash next to the body. That manager also trained clerks to refuse to sell any alcohol-containing products to people who seemed intoxicated. In 1999, a man in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin was arrested for abandoning his son in a restaurant after drinking a quart of Listerine. Police found him passed out in the back seat of his car and took him to jail. Three hours after his arrest, he registered a blood alcohol level of .264. That’s more than three times the legal limit for driving in Alaska. Kitty Dukakis, wife of Michael Dukakis, wrote in her book "Now You Know" that she drank aftershave, vanilla extract, nail polish remover and mouthwash before she finally sought help for her alcoholism. At Homeward Bound, a long-term drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility in Anchorage, workers see mouthwash intoxication every day, said counselor Jennifer Nieves. "If I see someone on the street with it and I am familiar with them, I take it away and pour it out," she said. Holloway, of APD, said he’d like to see stores such as the Midtown Wal-Mart and Northway Kmart put mouthwash in places that are not easily accessible, as the store manager in New Mexico did. But the stores "are afraid of racial or social implications," he said. The manager of the Midtown Wal-Mart could not be reached for comment. A woman who identified herself as the assistant manager, but refused to give her name, said she would not comment on the sale of mouthwash to inebriates. But, she said, "We don’t discriminate against any of our customers." Northway Kmart manager Bob Newbry was more forthcoming. He said cashiers at his store have been told not to sell mouthwash to inebriates. Lately the store has also taken steps to stem the problem by issuing trespass orders to nuisance customers and calling police if the person returns, he said. "We don’t lock (mouthwash) up or anything, it’s over by the pharmacy," he said, but employees now keep their eyes open for any unusual activity. The Northway Kmart has sold 84 1.5-liter bottles of antiseptic Listerine and 274 bottles of the generic brand, American Fare, so far this year. That doesn’t include product that’s been stolen, a common method of procurement for mouthwash abusers, Newbry said. Those are unusually high sales figures when you consider that the liter bottle is the more common choice for non-guzzling mouthwash users, he said. In the early evening of August 8, in a trash can across the street from the Gambell Street Carrs, small "shooter" sized bottles of Monarch Vodka and Bacardi Rum shared space with crushed, empty cans of Natural Ice. Underneath a potato chip bag was a lone, empty bottle of Listerine. "The people out here live to eat, drink and pass out," said APD Officer Pablo Paiz. "It’s like pushing a boulder up the hill one day and having it roll back down the next – it’s frustrating." Paiz has dealt with countless chronic inebriates in his 12 years with APD. For the last eight years he’s been a patrol officer, and before that he was in dispatch. He’s seen people drink vanilla, hairspray and mouthwash – virtually anything containing alcohol to feed an addiction, he said. "Usually by the time I get to them they will have discarded whatever they are drinking. But sometimes they’ll have a bottle of mouthwash or Monarch tucked up their sleeve. I found one guy walking down the street with six bottles of vanilla in his pocket… I said, ‘What are you doing, baking a cake?’" Statistics for mouthwash abuse in Anchorage are elusive because police say they can’t isolate them from other instances of public inebriation. But Paiz says it’s been "an ongoing, steady thing" for at least eight years. And, he said, recent alcohol restrictions in Fairview – at stores like Brown Jug and the Gambell Street Oaken Keg – have likely spurred consumption of alcohol substitutes. So is mouthwash to vodka what bathtub gin was to booze during prohibition? What crack is to cocaine? "I don’t believe so," said Ruth Moulton, a Fairview Community Council member and an active player in Fairview’s recent alcohol regulations. "People have been drinking mouthwash for years. I remember years ago people asking stores to move it because it was being shoplifted, and that was before the restrictions." Mouthwash is thymol, eucalyptol, methyl salicylate, menthol and alcohol. It’s 22 cents an ounce, and easier to drink than Final Net, Sterno or nail polish remover. It’s been shown to help prevent plaque accumulation and get people like Listerine Gene blotto and minty. And on Anchorage streets, it’s vividly colored proof of an ancient maxim: where there’s a will, there’s a way. |
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But what if the Zango owner is a cool guy too?
Ohh the dilemma?! |
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180solutions, Inc. 3600 136th Place SE Bellevue, WA 98006 US Domain Name: METRICSDIRECT.COM Administrative Contact, Technical Contact: Solutions, 180 [email protected] 3600 136th Place SE Bellevue, WA 98006 US 425-279-1200 |
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I think Sean is a cool guy and I have a beer with him at every show. still, Fuck you Lars! |
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I think that is the best solution. |
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First, your sig is to big, read the faq page, second, weird remark. |
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Probably the people in the best position to sue are the people with trademarks or pattents. |
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Jay when you get a moment check out this guys site . you will find alot of good information. http://www.benedelman.org/spyware/180-affiliates/ Also there was a case won over gator for poping up popups over anonther website. I think it was budget.com who filed against them. I will find the link for you to the docs here is a link to zangos blog as well. they settled with the FTC for 3 million not to long ago http://www.zango.com/destination/corporate/blog.aspx We need to get as much attention on this as possible while this in the spotlight:2 cents: |
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http://www.zango.com/Destination/Cor...aspx?year=2003 |
This thread is almost surreal. Someone who runs a sponsor program and a big traffic source, the latter (at least) targeted by scumware, isn't sufficiently concerned by that to get up speed on the issue. But weeks after it first aired - and (out of his own mouth) based solely on the personalities involved - he starts a thread in which he takes sides and dishes out personal insults.
Over the past couple of days, there have been a few attempts to reduce an industry-wide problem to the level of a Will vs Lars drama. I sincerely hope they are unsuccessful. I'm not fan of Will's. I sent someone over to join "Team Clickcash" in summer 2005 and it was a harmless (since it didn't cost anything) but disappointing experience for the person concerned. Two weeks into the "Zango" issue, I made a couple of fruitless appeals to try to put some direction into the opposition to scumware and get away from the repetitive mud-slinging. But Will could be an alcoholic wife-beater (or whatever it takes to make you contemptuous of someone) and it wouldn't make the slightest difference to the issue at hand. On the day this issue surfaced, I made a note that Lars would respond the following Saturday. I was wrong, he actually replied at 11:45pm (by the board-time I see) on Friday. The content of his response was as predictable as its timing, because his company had been caught fair and square playing in the dirt and based on his handling of previous issues, spin was all we could expect. And spin we got. There was barely an attempt to provide justification, let alone credible justification. I have written that I couldn't care less about Lars or about Zango, because both will be gone in a few years. Their importance right now is solely that they are symptoms of an immature industry which still has a lot of growing up to do. Huge amounts of time and therefore money are wasted when an industry preys on itself and everyone in it is forced to be constantly looking over their shoulders instead of getting on with the job of expanding their market. That is what online porn has primarily been doing for the past 5 years. That is why a single company like Zango can generate turnover equivalent to 40% of what the whole of online porn produces. That is why online porn, after a decade, is still estimated at a mere 5% of the "adult entertainment" industry. I retired into this business because of ill-health. I hadn't so much as looked at a copy of Playb*y since the barber who cut my hair as a teenager, left them out for his customers. I built my first website while reading "HTML in 21 Days". And I was earning 6 figures within 18 months. That's how easy it was to make money between 1996 and 2000. Competition has increased dramatically since then and unfortunately the most prevalent response has been to start feeding off each other: the symptoms are everything from selling worthless traffic through to the use of scumware. Somewhere along the line the majority seem to have forgotten we are selling a product second only to sex itself in its appeal and that we have as close to a global reach as our payment processors will allow. Charles Darwin wrote about the survival of the fittest. As is often the case with complex ideas, they become simplified and distorted when they enter the public arena. Darwin actually judged the ability to cooperate as a more powerful force for survival than individual strength and he credited the success of the human race to that ability. Business is the same: true professionals understand the difference between competition and activities which ultimately damage everyone. They will cooperate to rid their industry of the latter. The scumware issue isn't a battle, much less a war. It's just part of an industry going through growing pains and that is a process which will take another 5-10 years to complete. The outcome is inevitable: the cowboys of the industry, however they qualify for that sobriquet, will end up as insignificant figures on the sidelines. Unless you believe that online porn will be the first industry ever to resist that transition, there are two things to think about. The first is that those who focus on building their businesses will emerge in a much stronger position than those who try to make time stand still, grabbing an extra dollar for themselves here, a few cents there, from their existing sales. The second thing is that the people who matter in the long-term tend to have long memories. Only a fool would try to claim that scumware is not ultimately damaging to us all or that the use of it doesn't go far beyond anything which could reasonably be defined as competition. Before taking a public position, it might be wise to think about whether that position is something you will want people remembering in a few years time. |
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http://blogs.zdnet.com/Spyware/?p=845 |
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