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The Courts The Internet

US State Sues Web/SEO Firm For Deceiving Mom-and-Pops 96

netbuzz writes "The state of Washington is suing a search engine optimization and Web services outfit, based in Redmond, that has done business under the names Visible.net, Captures.com, and WebMarketingSource.com. In essence, the state says these entities have deceived mostly mom-and-pop sites through unfulfilled performance promises and financial shenanigans after charging up to $10,000 in up-front charges and more in monthly fees. About 90 complaints have been lodged over four years, the state says."
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US State Sues Web/SEO Firm For Deceiving Mom-and-Pops

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  • by Kilz ( 741999 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:43AM (#25760125)

    Than they would have searched to see if the company was reliable.

    • Re:You would think (Score:4, Interesting)

      by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:54AM (#25760229) Homepage Journal

      Seriously. The easy way to do this:

      1. Go to Google.
      2. Search for 'search engine optimization'.
      3. Go to MSN
      4. Repeat step 2 ...

      The company highest on the list of all search engines checked is probably the company you want.

      • by rugatero ( 1292060 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @10:14AM (#25760411)

        The company highest on the list of all search engines checked is probably the company you want.

        Wikipedia?

        • Obviously you would only include company websites for companies who are in the business.

      • by mfh ( 56 )

        The company highest on the list of all search engines checked is probably the company you want.

        Unless they paid Google to be on the top of the search results and they are evil. Do no evil? LLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL

        • Well, this is a valid test in at least one sense. If you wish to check their competence at search engine optimization, you look at how well their own search engine results are optimized. Kinda like checking out the quality of a sign-painting place by examining their own signage.

          Of course, that's based on the possibly unsupportable assumptions that (A) They did their own SEO ("ate their own dog food"), and (B) that they'll work as hard for you as they did for themselves.

      • Perhaps. Though maybe not, if they're more concerned with increasing the SEO rank of their clients than themselves. I may have a biased point of view, but my own company is perhaps the best in the business at SEO (at least of companies that "play by the rules" and always try to be ethical), but pays little attention to boosting our own site. Most of the clients we'd be interested in wouldn't be finding us through random internet searches in any event. We get our clients (mostly Fortune 1000 companies) by d
    • Re:You would think (Score:5, Insightful)

      by mcgrew ( 92797 ) * on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:54AM (#25760231) Homepage Journal

      You're blaming the victims. That's like if I get robbed while walking home from Felber's and when the cops arrest the mugger, you're saying "well you shouldn't have been walking in that neighborhood". OK, next time I'll drive home no matter how drunk I am. The other drivers and pedestrians should know better than to be on any street between the bar and my house, right?

      Wrong. The mugger should be prosecuted and if I'm drunk I should leave my car at the bar. If someone hires an SEO and is defrauded, the AG should prosecute. That's what he's there for.

      • Errmmm....I think parent might've been joking...

        • Sarcasm? On the Internet?

        • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) *

          Possibly, but there are far too many poeople here who say "let Darwin take care of the weak" and mean it sincerely.

          If he was joking, he did a poor job of it, and there are a whole lot of similar "jokes" in the thread. This [slashdot.org] was an obvious joke (and even got a grin from me); modded "flamebait".

          • by KDR_11k ( 778916 )

            Possibly, but there are far too many poeople here who say "let Darwin take care of the weak" and mean it sincerely.

            Last I checked they called themselves "libertarians" but that might have changed again.

        • I'm not so sure about that (that the parent was joking) Whatever happened to buyer beware? Do you believe every salesman that comes to your door? of course not.

          The fact is, the internet is still the wild west, there are still people selling potions and tinctures that promise to fix every problem. The only solution is for everyone involved to get a little smarter. If you coddle the consumer and protect him from scam artists, they will never learn

          Now i don't know the specifics of this case, but obviously i

          • Do you believe every salesman that comes to your door?

            Of course I do. Just last week I got a great deal on some volcano insurance.

          • by MooUK ( 905450 )

            I'm not disagreeing that people should be careful what they buy... but that doesn't mean we shouldn't punish or prosecute fraud.

      • by Moraelin ( 679338 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @10:16AM (#25760445) Journal

        Well, if you were simply the victim, yes, i'd blame the mugger. But if it was you who hired someone to do a shady thing for you, and he shafts you, heh, I'm just going to say you got what you fucking deserved.

        The fact is, there are honest ways to advertise. Just buy ad-words. There, you'll be on everyone's search page, if they search for that kind of product. Heck, Google even offers the option to show your ad when someone searches for a _related_ thing. E.g., it might show your sports shoes store, when someobody searches for slippers, if you activated that option.

        It's honest, it's clearly marked as an ad, and it doesn't interfere with anyone else's search results.

        But nah, that's too honest, I guess. Let's hire a "SEO" to do link spam, set up link farms, and try to _poison_ everyone's searches with your crap. It's a predatory model, in which a useful resource for everyone is devalued and turned into crap, just so some snake oil peddler can make a few extra bucks.

        As business models go, it's akin to pissing in the town's water supply, so you can sell a few more bottles of soda.

        And if you hired someone to do that kind of a thing for you, and he shafted you... good! Serves you right. I won't stop looking down on the crook too, mind you. But when the case is that one wannabe crook hired another crook, well, I'll look down on them both.

        • by colesw ( 951825 )
          I'd agree with you, except most of these "mom & pop" type businesses would have no clue how a SEO works. As far as they are concerned these companies will do "magic" to make them appear higher on google (or engine of your choice). They'll also be the type of people to complain about the link farms, but have no idea its the company they hired that is helping to create those.
          • So basically they hired someone, and paid some tens of thousands of dollars... but they don't know what that person will do, nor what they'll get for their money? :P I mean, how stupid is that?

            Actually, now that I think about it, that's not the answer I'm interested in any more. I'm thinking more: is there a list of these suckers (e.g., the AG must mention them in the lawsuit), so I can offer them some equally undefined services for lots of money?

            Ok, so that wasn't entirely serious, but it serves to illustr

            • So basically they hired someone, and paid some tens of thousands of dollars... but they don't know what that person will do, nor what they'll get for their money? :P I mean, how stupid is that?

              1. Chiropractors
              2. Investment advisors
              3. Fortune tellers
              4. Rating agencies
              5. Lawyers
              6. Incomprehensible EULAs and closed source software upgrades that aren't really upgrades
              7. 419 scams
              8. P3n15 3n14rg3m3nt pills
              9. "sure thing" stock tips
              10. "make money working at home - small investment required"
              11. Hank Paulson, Ben Bernanke, bailout ...
              • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                by Moraelin ( 679338 )

                Oh, I'm sure there _are_ plenty of stupid people out there. I just

                1. have trouble imagining that the same persons who'd cheerfull blow all their money on a 419 scam, still end up having enough money left to open a store _and_ pay some tens of thousands to a SEO.

                2. At least for _some_ of the things you've listed, there is _some_ explanation of what they do. If I decide to go to, say, a fortune teller, I know what service they (pretend to) provide.

                There still is an answer -- no matter how stupid or dishonest

          • No. This is the equivalent of those people who paid money for those empty plastic boxes with a button on them which promise to "activate" the "sensors" that they were told make lights turn green for cop cars and ambulances at intersections (ob car analogy: check). People looking to get ahead without work rarely seem to do enough research (a form of work) to find out if the scammers they are hiring actually do anything at all, let alone if they are a value. I consider victims of scams like this as just havi
        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Is "link spam" illegal? No. Despite your not liking it, they're completely within their rights to pay somebody to setup a "link farm" for them. If that person rips them off, they have the right to sue. Whether or not *you* like their choice doesn't matter - it's their decision.

          Also, I'm not seeing how buying "ad-words" is any more "honest" than paying for SEO. They're both for scumbags, IMO.

          • Is "link spam" illegal? No. Despite your not liking it, they're completely within their rights to pay somebody to setup a "link farm" for them. If that person rips them off, they have the right to sue. Whether or not *you* like their choice doesn't matter - it's their decision.

            And the grandparent is completely within his rights to look down on them for choosing this option, call them crooks, and say they got what they fucking deserved. I agree with him: these bastards deserved to get their hands burned for

          • Oh, they are well within their rights to sue. And I should hope that the scammers get punished too.

            But nevertheless, they're not mutually exclusive. If scumbag A hired scumbag B, it's not an either-or-situation. Both are scumbags. That person B is a scumbag doesn't automatically exclude person A from being a scumbag.

            Basically it's like this: person A hired person B to piss in the city's water supply, so person A can sell more bottled water. Person B took the money and ran. Can you say that either of them wa

        • You're assuming the "wannabe crook" is actually a crook. I don't get that impression. It seems that Mom & Pop simply didn't know much about this new-fangled "Google" thing, and someone came up and said with confidence "I can make Google work for YOU!" Still not knowing about Google or the internet, Mom & Pop said "Ok, sounds good. You seem like a nice guy, and guarantee me 100% return on investment, sure I'll pay for that." Now, Crook has come close to committing fraud by mis-selling his services. G

      • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        So called Search Engine Optimizers are a small step away from spammers.

        Users relying on either spam or SEO to sell their product are the scum, and are asking for it. No matter how much you perfume the turd, it will still be a turd.

        • No matter how much you perfume the turd, it will still be a turd.

          Ahh, so that's the politically correct equivalent of 'lipstick on a pig'.

        • There are good SEO techniques - Valid HTML. proper CSS. good English, or Language of your choice etc. Proper spelling and grammar etc. Proper use of Ad sense even. Then there are Bad techniques, that tend to not work or backfire soon enough. It's like money lenders some are better(Bank) some are worse, payday loans and some carry baseball bats.
        • I think your reasoning is very old-fashioned and jaded. Just because your website is a turd, doesn't mean your company is.

          We're talking about mom-and-pop operations here. Small businesses should stick to what they do best, and subcontract when an odd job is needed. Do most companies shoot their own TV commercials or record their own radio spots? Of course not - they consult marketing firms who do it for a living.

          Let's face it - all marketing is scummy. In traditional marketing the goal is to conv
      • Even though the parent is joking, yours is no comparison.

        Before entering into any contract you need to see if the contract is likely to be honored. This is called due diligence. I'm tired of this culture of victimization. No one is going to look out for you. You are responsible for yourself. The government is there only to provide protection of your property. The individuals aggrieved by the company have a right for their case to be heard in court. However, doing due diligence to minimize the likelihood of

        • No one is going to look out for you. You are responsible for yourself. The government is there only to provide protection of your property.

          I've been wondering about this for a while now: why do the people who are so big on personal responsibility nonetheless require that someone else protects their property ? I mean, shouldn't that be your responsibility too, rather than something you'll call Big Brother to help you with ?

          • Indeed it is. Possession id 9/10ths of the law. However, there are people who would leverage physical or other peculiar aspects. The need the government to give everyone equal protection arises, else you have anarchy.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by digitalunity ( 19107 )

      Often times the road to being a victim like this is that the website owners don't have the technical competence to evaluate statements from SEO companies for truth. SEO companies also typically expend a lot of effort to maintain a positive image in search engine results.

      I've had dealings with these types of companies before and the average SEO is very shady. They charge thousands of dollars promising every small business owner that they could be the next amazon.com if only they were higher in the search eng

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by tomhudson ( 43916 )

        While you're right in all the points you make, it doesn't mean that the suckers are entirely blameless. They fall prey to their own greed, in wanting to believe that there's a "magic formula" to success, that rather than building up their business via good customer service and word of mouth, that throwing a few grand at some "web expert" will make them rich.

        The business next to the office I work at told me they were going to use such a scumbag. I told him he was wasting his money. Sure enough, a couple

        • Do you think it is possible that the Mom and Pops are not up on the latest technology (which would explain why they are looking to outsource their SEO) and possibly not aware that many SEO firms are basically scammers? After all, there was a time not long ago when SEO was a legitimate field where they assisted you in choosing good keywords for your site, setting up relevant metadata tags and generally optimizing your site to be crawled and categorized correctly.
          I get those e-mails where they offer to put me
          • Do you think it is possible that the Mom and Pops are not up on the latest technology (which would explain why they are looking to outsource their SEO) and possibly not aware that many SEO firms are basically scammers?

            They already have a web site, so they have someone they can ask, rather than just take a strangers' word for it. Or they can just search for "SEO scam" or "search engine optimization scam". When I hear of something that I'm not sure of, I search for the terms + "fraud" or "scam" or "bogus"

        • I think these people should look more for marketing companies, and less for SEO companies. It's more important to have a strategy when it comes to your online presence, and more often than not, this comes down to promotions, word of mouth, and traditional means of marketing. I've been telling my clients this for a long time. Of course, I am now working FT for another company, so see how well being honest has worked for me. ;)
          • I've been telling my clients this for a long time. Of course, I am now working FT for another company, so see how well being honest has worked for me. ;)

            No good deed goes unpunished.

      • i would tend to agree with you. i have a friend from high school, who although is a nice guy in person and as a friend, is involved in a lot of shady business dealings. he's always been good at making money--it runs in his family i suppose--but he does so by less than honorable means. in high school he used to build list makers (for collecting e-mail addresses) and mass mailers (to send spam) for porn site owners. and he would get paid $10k+ for each application too.

        after high school, he moved on to SEO. wh

    • Appreciate all the inquiries about the recent press release. We will be posting our official statement on our corporate blog by the end of the day. We'll be sure to post the link here as well. Thank you for reaching out in this manner, that is why we have several customer centered profiles and resources available and remain members on several customer/company awareness sites.
  • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) * on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:43AM (#25760131)
    Thank you for calling Visible.net, your search engine optimization provider. Please select from the following menu:
    1. If you are interested in Visible.net's exciting service and wish to become a new customer, press 1 now.
    2. If you are an existing customer and are having a problem or wish to cancel your account, press 2 now.
    3. If you are a member of the media and wish to inquire about recent allegations of fraud, press 2 now.
    4. To end this call, press 2 now.
  • $10,000 to optimize your search engine? Guess that's one way to stimulate the economy.
  • scam (Score:5, Insightful)

    by D'Sphitz ( 699604 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:53AM (#25760223) Journal
    The SEO industry in general is such a scam, it's amazing how many people fall for it.
    • Re:scam (Score:5, Insightful)

      by mcgrew ( 92797 ) * on Friday November 14, 2008 @10:10AM (#25760371) Homepage Journal

      Wow, that comment was modded "flamebait"? I din't see how. Looks like SEO employees have mod points today!

      If your SEO company isn't a fraud, how about explaining yourselves to us? Using mod points to censor is itself fraud.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by tomhudson ( 43916 )

        I'll join you. Let the SEO scumbuckets waste their mod points - they're ALL scum.

        They lie. They mislead. They con. If Vlad the Impaler were around and there was any justice in the world, they'd be "Shit on a Stick".

        You don't "build your brand" by being at the top of a search engine, but by giving customers what they want, in a convenient, cost-effective and timely manner. BTW, SEO "experts" are failures at building their own "brand", because we sure as shit don't think anything of them - or their pitifu

        • Re:scam (Score:5, Informative)

          by Zebano ( 626335 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @11:42AM (#25761477)
          Back when I was an applications programmer in IT, I was dedicated to creating apps for the Marketing department. This had an ancillary benefit of also making me responsible for maintaining our public web site and redesigning it to be "solution centric". I made some good tools like a product finder and comparison tool, and there are some pages out there that wasted days of my life.

          After about a year of this, they decided against my and 2 other IT department employees advice to hire an SEO. We had a web tracking tool, but we now had to embedd 1x1 pixels + javascript images on every page so we could track how many users were using our site (we already had these metrics, but the SEO collated them in a prettier fashion); The best part about this was that the data was stored on their system and requires a yearly fee to use. After that we had to load up our pages with tons of misleading meta tags. Next we were encouraged to redesign our site to make it "solution-centric" (yes, we paid to be told to do this hokey redesign despite Marketing already deciding to do this; I still don't understand what's wrong with just advertising your products when your external app group has been decimated). Finally, they told us to buy paid search ads from google (about the only thing I agreed with).

          In general we went from about 5th to 4rd on most search terms on the search engines we cared about (Google, MSN, Yahoo). I will third the opinion that SEOs are snake oil salesmen.

          An amusing aside... After I left the group, they reviewed most of our pages and made suggestions on how to rework them (mostly the content which is in Marketing's domain) but they started trying to tell IT how the pages should be coded, going so far as to say that well-formed HTML is bad. That day, after another inane conference call; three of us left work at 3PM and spent the rest of the day drinking.
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by kimvette ( 919543 )

            An amusing aside... After I left the group, they reviewed most of our pages and made suggestions on how to rework them (mostly the content which is in Marketing's domain) but they started trying to tell IT how the pages should be coded, going so far as to say that well-formed HTML is bad.

            That's bizarre. Clients often ask about SEO stuff and we refuse to get into the black hat stuff. We tell them it's all about clean HTML, clean design and content, content, content. If they want lots of traffic they should p

            • if you're doing your job right to begin with then organic SEO follows naturally.

              It's not as obvious as you make it sound. It's anything but natural, for example, to write a blog about your business, using a corporate voice. Companies didn't speak this way until a few years ago, and only those at the forefront are aware of this practise. And even if you figure that much out on your own, do you allow comments? Do you host it on your existing domain or on a new one? Do you speak as yourself or anonymously? Which strategies worked best for your industry in the past?

              I agree with al

          • My site's been at the top of search engine rankings for years (admittedly it's an engineering niche market) and I figure the reasons it remains so is because:

            - it's pretty basic HTML with some Javascript
            - good, descriptive TLD name reflecting the site's content
            - no pop-ups or intrusive ads, no ad services besides Google AdSense
            - fairly regular updates
            - features stuff that is of interest to my readers
            - owner (i.e., me) has 30 years experience in the subject matter
            - semi-regular uploading of searchab
      • Your hostility makes me wonder whether you know what SEO is, or that there are such things as white hat and black hat SEO.

        Black hat SEO is about exploiting oversights in algorithms. Black hat is a great way to get immediate gain, but will carry severe penalties when it's found out.

        White hat SEO is about providing superior information to users and building your real-world credibility over time, which is subsequently rewarded by search engines. You first provide meaningful content which is relevant to
        • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) *

          I think some previous posters answered your question quite well. If you need a web designer or webmaster, you need no SEO company. The web designer or webmaster should know how to ethically optimise your pages.

          Nothing beats good content. For years after I posted "How to Quit Smoking Cigarettes" on K5, typing that into a Google search would lead straight to it (it's no longer on the first page of search items). And if you type biters anonymous [google.com] into Google, that three year old diary still comes up first.

    • Re:scam (Score:4, Interesting)

      by MrCawfee ( 13910 ) <mrcawfee@[ ]fee.org ['caw' in gap]> on Friday November 14, 2008 @12:02PM (#25761817) Homepage

      Yes and no (note: i work for a company that one of the products is SEO related);

      The yes:
      The SEO companies the "promise" higher rankings ARE a scam, and they are complete BS. 90% of SEO is guessing what google indexes, and those criteria do change pretty frequently. And because of the undefined nature of SEO, it is extremely easy to pull shit out of your ass and profess it is true, and take people's money. Any SEO guy that speaks in absolutes, is scamming you. Anything that seems like it isn't useful to the user, is bullshit.

      The No:

      SEO is actually real, and is necessary for pulling newer websites from lower in the rankings. Effective techniques are pretty easy, and they are listed below. All others that these stupid companies suggest are either BS or will not survive a google update in the future.

        1) Page names in the URL that are relevant to what you are doing (not article11151.html)
        2) Meta tags in the document that are relevant to it's content.
        3) Clean HTML, use tags (such as h1) for what they were designed for
        4) Internal linking (limits redundancy on pages)
        5) Sitemap.xml
        6) No javascript/flash content

      Not much else is really necessary.

      But yes, 99% of the SEO companys are praying on these small company's dumbness.
       

    • SEOs did an amazing job for expertsexchange though

  • Shocking. (Score:2, Insightful)

    Is there any context in which "SEO" isn't a synonym for "worthless slimy huckster"?

    Ok, somebody has to tell mom and pop about proper use of metadata; but as for the rest? "Say, this slick gentleman promises to help me lie to search engines for a very reasonable price, he seems honest to me."
    • Is there any context in which "SEO" isn't a synonym for "worthless slimy huckster"?

      SEO usually means "search engine optimization" rather than "search engine optimizer", but even then I see no ethical problem if I give some advice on someone with a one-man-company with a small website. For example I tell him that he should get rid of the flash animation on the home page, should use alt tags on the graphical menu links, mention the name of his company and the product or service that he sells on the home page,

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by spyrochaete ( 707033 )

      Is there any context in which "SEO" isn't a synonym for "worthless slimy huckster"? Ok, somebody has to tell mom and pop about proper use of metadata; but as for the rest? "Say, this slick gentleman promises to help me lie to search engines for a very reasonable price, he seems honest to me."

      Here's a great example I learned at a web marketing conference (so I can't take credit for this pearl):

      A major UK bank was flummoxed as to why less credible credit firms were ranking higher on Google for loans, even though their own popular "lending" website had been live for over a decade. The bank hired an SEO who interviewed them about the marketplace and its customers, researched the competition, and investigated rankings based on relevant keywords found in the web server referrer logs. This armed

  • Paid laziness (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ZarathustraDK ( 1291688 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:59AM (#25760275)
    For goodness sake, how hard can it be to optimize a website for a search-engine?

    There are a plethora of howtos out there on SEO, and most, if not all, can be implemented by the people making the webpage.

    Just spend a single day reading up on the stuff and save yourself a bunch. But of course that means learning something new, the HORROR!

    Yeah yeah, I know, my site uses frames, which suck SEO-wise. I know... I'll correct it some day, but I wont pay 10.000 bucks to do so.
    • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) *

      I doubt anyone at slashdot would use an SEO service, but you must realise that there are still a lot of net noobs out there that have no clue how to get information. For example, say you have Fred and Ethyl Mertz who have run Mertz Discount Liquor for forty years, and Ethyl's friend Lucy says "Hey, you and Fred ought to get a web site."

      So Fred and Ethyl get a web site. They type "Stag" into Google (looking for their site; they're running a special on Stag Beer this week) and all they find are sites about de

      • by jafiwam ( 310805 )

        No kidding, my friend Goat Se and his store Lemon Party Liquors had a very similar problem.

    • I'm assuming these people had to hire web developers to begin with. In this day and age, is it too much to ask that web developers perform the basic SEO? It should be a condition on the contract when developing the website, and it would undoubtedly be a lot cheaper than spending an extra $10k or more to an SEO company.
    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      For goodness sake, how hard can it be to read up in some medical text books for your ailment?

      There are a plethora of books, and websites out there on medical issues, and most, if not all, can be understood by ordinary people.

      Just spend a single day reading up on the stuff and save yourself a bunch. But of course that means learning something new, the HORROR!

      Imagine for a moment that the above was said by a doctor, because some doctors were making people pay 1000s for unnecessary appendectomy operations. How

      • Difference here being that messing around withh SEO yourself is free and does not involve accidentally damaging yourself if things go wrong. You can edit the content of your site if it doesn't fit with your SEO-expectations, you can't edit your spinalchord once it has snapped by home-surgery.

        Plumbers, mechanics et al do work which is usually required to be done by a licensed professional.

        SEO is childs play, it's legal to do by yourself, it's harmless, and it's reversible. If someone is ready to blow 1
        • by dword ( 735428 )
          You forgot to add, a simple book on the common cold is bigger than the encyclopaedia of SEO. Besides, regarding what the GP said, this isn't about mom&pops learning SEO, it's about whoever builds the websites learning SEO. When you make a website (we're talking about complex pages here, not just a Dreamweaver family page), you already have basic HTML, CSS, JavaScript knowledge. If this was about a personal static page and you wanted it to rank up in search engines, then I'd agree: you don't know anythin
      • For goodness sake, how hard can it be to read up in some medical text books for your ailment?

        I agree with you that's what we pay them for. However, this is exactly what many people do. I can't back this up but many /.rs probably fall into this category. If you have the presence of mind to do research it's rarely something more serious. At the very least you'll be better informed when you talk to the doctor. If your in so much pain you can't do anything get to the emergency room.
        When I had conjunctivitis I did a bunch of research until I found eyebrite. That and some wet washcloths over my eyes fi

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  • I know from experience that a lot of Ad based publication agencies for RF magazines also offer search engine optimization for a particular customer.

    It's generally offered as part of a deal like "I'll put you ad on pages 100, 125, and 150 and then we'll send you over some web developers to help you clean up and optimize your website."

    Personally search engine optimization is hit or miss and I would definitely not pay $10,000 for something like that. Sadly this is one of those cases were a little common se

  • While it certainly isn't Google's fault or any other search engines fault, how many people could they help by providing a link on every results page (off to the side some where) with a little explanation of how the results were achieved and maybe search links to articles about good web design and how to make your page relevant (and possibly an explanation of why SEOs are bad.)

    I'm just saying, if they tried to take a little more voodoo out of the web I bet this would happen less.

  • It is absolutely shocking how easy it seems to be to set up a business that has no intention of offering the services that they claim to offer. Most people quickly see through these shams, but sadly, there really is a sucker born every minute, if not more frequently.

    I once spent a few days working for a company that claimed to offer assistance with using eBay. It seemed legitimate enough at first. They sold an instructional book and a couple of CDs, and they offered a few other services like hosting ima
    • Video Professor?

      • No, but when I see those Video Professor ads, it sure does seem like they're the same type of organization. I was with epowerandprofits.com. They used to run a late night infomercial starring Chuck Woolery, of Love Connection fame. Sleaze!
  • I've bothered to ask this question [getsatisfaction.com] to the Visible.net SEO company and they've bothered to reply on their blog [visible.net].

    Basically, they said they're just recommending you the same things you can find on this page [google.com] and saying that the Attorney General didn't care about their happy customers (which have no idea that they got just a few tips for thousands of dollars). To me, that's like being charged for stealing and saying "But why won't you listen to other people I've come in contact with, because I never stole from

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