sorry, i do not have a link. it is from The insider's guide to message boards. here is the info and the complete story including mention of comparable services.. Money Magazine New York Sep 1999
Authors: Borzou Daragahi
Volume: 28
Issue: 9
Pagination: 143-146
ISSN: 01494953
Subject Terms: Web site reviews Investment policy Personal financeWeb sites Investment policy Personal finance Internet
Classification Codes: 9190: US 5250: Telecommunications systems 9120: Product specific treatment 3400: Investment analysis
Geographic Names: US
Abstract:
Most financial message boards on the Internet are filled with irrelevant chatter, but there are some pockets of community and civilized discussion if you know where to look. To help you find them, a guided tour of the Web's 4 dominant investment chat sites is provided: 1. Silicon Investor (www.techstocks.com), 2. Motley Fool (boards.fool.com), 3. Raging Bull (www.ragingbull.com), and 4. Yahoo! (messages.yahoo.com/yahoo/business_and_finance). Copyright Time Incorporated Sep 1999
Full Text:
SOMEBODY'S TALKING ABOUT YOUR STOCKS ONLINE. TAKE OUR TOUR TO FIND OUT WHERE.
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Visit any financial message board on the Net, and you may feel like you've stepped out of the bus terminal and into the streets of some teeming, unfamiliar city. Where do you go first? How do you get acquainted with the locals? And who's the. freak named Food Stamps in a Bodybag screaming "Awesome earnings run!!!"?
Most boards are filled with irrelevant chatter, but there are some pockets of community and civilized discussion if you know where to look. To help you find them, follow us on a guided tour of the Web's four dominant investment chat sites, then head to www.money.com/contents for a more detailed interactive guide with additional help and links to where the action is.
SILICON INVESTOR (www.techstocks.com)
Members: 120,000. Daily posts: 20,000.
Best discussion topics: Most large-cap Nasdaq stocks.
Lay of the land: Nicknamed SI by its users, Silicon Investor is the upscale neighborhood in town, attracting a high percentage of advanced investors and active traders. Anyone can read the messages for free, but to post your own thoughts you have to pay ($200 lifetime, $60 half-year). The fee may give SI an elitist air, but it's just steep enough to deter the less serious from joining, and many discussion threads are earnest indeed. "Stocks go down ultimately for fundamental reasons," writes dppl, the founder of the popular Technical Analysis for Shorts and Longs thread. "But these reasons are often foreshadowed by technical indications [that] can show the writing on the wall before the wall is even visible."
Highlights: Not surprisingly, considering the site's address, tech discussions are by far the most popular forums. Some, like Dell, Intel and Compaq, have attained near legendary status, thanks to the variety and intelligence of their posts. But there are also good forurns that are not focused on individual stocks, such as Market Gems, with its bent toward short-term trading, or Ask Michael Burke, where a guy named, yep, Michael Burke, opines on subjects ranging from economics to John Travolta.
Fitting in: Like a gated community, SI quickly escorts rule breakers out of town. Those who violate the site's hallowed Terms of Use by posting advertisements or abusive or obscene comments get booted without a refund. It's probably no accident, then, that unlike at most message sites, many participants here feel comfortable enough to post under their real names rather than kooky handles.
Warning: Even the best neighborhoods have back alleys. You should avoid the $5-and-under forums not only here but wherever you travel, since those areas tend to attract users more interested in pumping stocks than analyzing them.
MOTLEY FOOL (boards.fool.com)
Members: 500,000-plus. Daily posts: 3,300.
Best discussion topics: America Online, Amazon.com, Iomega, CMGI.
Lay of the land: If The Fool were a neighborhood, Old Glory would grace the Victorian homes and lemonade stands would dot the sidewalks. Its mainstream denizens are generally true believers in the religion of buy and hold. More than half a million users have registered at The Fool, but the regular participants are a much smaller, tight-knit bunch.
Highlights: Although posters usually make polite and intelligent comments, there are far fewer hot spots here than you might expect. The Fool has fallen out of fashion among board aficionados, garnering only a fraction of its competitors' daily traffic, and the bulletin boards of stocks as widely held as Sunoco and Gillette often remain cavernously empty for days. Start at the section that lists the 25 most active threads over the past seven days to zero in on the action.
Fitting in: Five full-time constables-The Fool calls them strollers-patrol the streets, stirring conversations, reprimanding troublemakers and welcoming newcomers.
RAGING BULL (www.ragingbul.com)
Members: 185,000. Daily posts: 24,000.
Best discussion topics: IPO General Discussion, (MGI Traders Talk, Dr. Bob's Stock Timers.
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Lay of the land: Only two years old, Raging Bull is like that hot city neighborhood where all the new restaurants are opening up. Think New York City's East Village or Chicago's Wicker Park. It has attracted members who seem looser and less formal than those at SI or The Fool while being no less informed. And as at SI, discussions about tech companies and megacap stocks reign supreme.
Highlights: Though its focus and membership aren't all that different from SI's, Raging Bull has distinguished itself with some unique amenities. Its best innovation is the ignore button, which lets you filter out that guy who keeps haranguing you for being long Compaq. Likewise, a search bot digs through the day's posts, deleting spam, ads and profane posts.
Fitting in: Eight so-called community developers surf the site, scolding riffraff, moderating 23 threads and listing the day's top five posts at the Herd on the Board area. Looking for a trustworthy insider to show you the way? The weekly Behind the Boards column highlights those deemed to be valuable contributors.
YAHOO! (messages.yahoo.com/yahoo /business_and_finance )
Members/daily posts: Undisclosed.
Best discussion topics: The ones you create and monitor yourself
Lay of the land: Watch your wallet here, because you're hanging out on the wrong side of the tracks, and there's not a cop in sight. This is where an engineer posted a link to a phony Bloomberg story in April announcing a buy-out of PairGain Technologies, sending its stock soaring before the fraud was unveiled.
Yahoo! won't discuss usage statistics, but by sheer volume it is easily the most popular site (Yahoo!'s Amazon board, for example, attracted 1,176 messages on one randomly selected day, compared with 220 at SI's Amazon board). More is not more. Unless you're 11 years old, you will quickly tire of the you-suck-no-you-suck banter that most often passes for investment conversation.
Highlights: There aren't any. What with thousands of threads on penny stocks and spurious trading systems, the only reason to stick around is to start your own discussion through the Yahoo! clubs feature and rigorously limit access.
Fitting in: Are you sure you want to? People do get booted for foul or threatening language, but troublemakers can simply create new aliases and log right back on. Save yourself some grief, and hail a cab back to the nicer parts of town.
BORZOU DARAGAHI
borzou_daragahi@timeinc.com
MESSAGE BOARDS OFF THE BEATEN PATH
Four less popular sites that are worth a look
Stock talk megasites like Yahoo! and Silicon Investor may attract thousands of posts a day, but lots of thriving smaller communities on the Web focus on specialized topics. Here are a few less traveled sites where you might find conversations to match your interests.
MORNINGSTAR.COM
www.morningstar.com.
A great place to discuss mutual funds.
FUNDS INTERACTIVE
www.fundsinteractive .com/wwwboard.
Another leading mutual fund discussion site.
GOMEZ.COM
www.gomez.com/finance /community. For questions and gossip about online brokers.
ARMCHAIR MILLIONAIRE
www.armchairmillionaire .com/messageboards
Beginner's bonanza, where one thread is titled, There Are No Dumb Questions.
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