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Technology Stocks : InfoSpace (INSP): Where GNET went! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/11/1999 1:44:00 AM
From: Technologyguy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28311
 
You deserve it, Russell!



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/11/1999 2:52:00 AM
From: Puna  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28311
 
Russell, welcome to the Gnet thread, great company, and excellent management!
Thank you from all of us, I think you gave many of us a future pay raise!

PS-Who helped you with the tie? Puna



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/11/1999 6:42:00 AM
From: Jay Plummer  Respond to of 28311
 
Russell,
For what you do for GNET you are underpaid!! Good luck with finding more profitable companies. Maybe in a few years you will have more than PA. :-)

Jay



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/11/1999 9:37:00 AM
From: Urlman  Respond to of 28311
 
LOL! (EOM)



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/11/1999 10:36:00 AM
From: Hawkmoon  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 28311
 
I was joking on the pay raise. :-)

ROFL!!!!

Options, Russell.... Options. Options with an exercise price of $100+ are what you get for increasing shareholder value.

That's how your investors give you a raise..... <VBG>

And I'm sure you will deservedly earn every penny.

Btw, next time you do a presentation, you might want to make hire a bartender and mobile bar providing free "spirits". I believe that would be an allowable expenditure under entertainment expenses, and one heck of a way to attract those skin-flint analysts always looking for a freebie.... :0)

Regards,

Ron



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/11/1999 10:11:00 PM
From: sandintoes  Respond to of 28311
 
Hey Russell, just thinking, are you married? I have two beautiful daughters! Really do. R



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/17/1999 8:46:00 PM
From: Carolyn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28311
 
Russell, we love you to death and love what you have done for us, the loyal GNET groupies. But, the green Datek ad on SI? Please make it go away. Thank you.



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)10/28/1999 10:18:00 PM
From: Pareto  Respond to of 28311
 
Leadership = Vision + Execution

Congratulations to the team for a job well done.

We'll stay aboard, we have a great captain. Let's open a barrel of good wine. Cheers!!!

``To see expanding margins on larger and larger revenue numbers can lead to pretty substantial cash flow,' he said.
``That's what we love about our business.'

That's why we love this company.

Regards,
# 8 Pareto
From Chile



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)6/30/2000 3:40:28 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28311
 
Russell, as everyone knows, I am a big fan of SI and I agree with Jill that it is a quality versus quantity issue when talking about SI v. RB. (see WSJ article below).

However, as I am sure you know and as day to day posting statistics confirm, there were two important dates where the growth in posting on SI slowed and then went negative.

Those dates were (drum roll, please): the date that the ZSUN 8 lawsuit was made public and people realized that SI had given up people's real names without notifying them first like AOL and YHOO do. That was the date the growth slowed.

The date that the posting fell off a cliff was the day Floyd Schneider got a temporary restraining order put against him. While it was a gross error on the part of the attorney that then represented him to not show up in court to respond to the order, SI members were clearly shocked to find that someone of their ilk could be sued by a company of dubious integrity.

But more than that, people put two and two together and said that while they may not like Schneider or agree with his views, they were "SHOCKED. JUST SHOCKED" to see a temporary restraining order against a poster which they would never want against themselves.

Ergo, they go to Yahoo and Raging Bull where they don't need to give up their credit card and thus avoid the potential to be dobbed in as they say in Aussie (otherwise known as Squealing or being narcked on) by SI.

And when I say SI, in this particular case (The ZSUN 8), I mean YOU personally. Because I am Auric Goldfinger, I KNOW that the give up of the ZSUN 8 names was YOU. You may demur, but as I have operatives everywhere...

So the point of this is that I will credit you with having created a pretty good company out of several disparate parts out of a friggen Maxwell Capital shell.

However, if choosing to turn over the ZSUN 8 names of which I was one and, if it is not clear to the others, it is clear to me that there was a VAST Conspiracy (as Hillary would say) to lob a hardball my way for having had the gall to publicly question the origins of GNET pre-Paul Allen/Vulcan Ventures respectability. And that is your choice as CEO of said august company to turn over our names.

However, realize two things in NO UNCERTAIN TERMS: 1) The ZSUN 8 will be clearly vindicated and this will happen shortly. What happens with that case in the next several weeks will make it crystal clear to EVERYONE, even the crims and touts.

2) I submit to you and the general public that views this post (before and if it gets deleted), that by giving up the identities of the ZSUN 8 without notifying us beforehand, and mine in particular to SLAPP me, you sowed the seeds of GNET's growth demise.

Thank you.

PS, Still having both the Lobster NAD the 16 oz. steak for dinner at the Metropolitan Grill? zagat.com
____________________________________________________________

"Raging Bull's Total Board Posts Surge Ahead of Silicon Investor By CARRIE LEE WSJ.COM

Move over Silicon Investor!

In a case of youth begets speed, Raging Bull
(www.ragingbull.com) recently charged past
the bellwether Internet stock-discussion site
in popularity among online investors.

A comparison of total posts on the two sites show that through Tuesday,
Raging Bull had received 14.9 million posts, compared with 14.0 million
for Silicon Investor (www.siliconinvestor.com), which is three years older.

Raging Bull's rise comes as Internet-discussion sites in general enjoy
tremendous growth because of the decade-long boom in the stock market
that has helped make investing a household phenomenon.

Raging Bull, which started in September 1997, has over 680,000 users
and receives an average of 50,000 to 75,000 posts a day. Silicon Investor
has over 300,000 subscribers and an average of 20,000 posts a day.

Tara Burgess, manager of community development for Raging Bull, says
the site has spent less than $300,000 on advertising since its inception and
has grown largely by word-of-mouth.

"From day one it's always been about
momentum, friends telling friends about the
site," she says.

Jill Munden, a Silicon Investor spokeswoman,
says Raging Bull is probably benefiting from its free format. Silicon Investor
charges posters a $120 annual subscription fee. But anyone can read the
boards for free.

"Free sites generally get a higher volume of posts," Ms. Munden says,
adding that Silicon Investor boards attract better quality posts. "[Free sites]
receive more posts generally because of the quality issue."

On the contrary, argues Ms. Burgess, Raging Bull's business is growing
"because of the quality of what's being discussed on our boards."

Raging Bull isn't the only free stock-discussion site. Yahoo! Finance and
Motley Fool are also free. Yahoo, which launched its message boards in
late 1996, receives hundreds of thousands of posts a day, while Motley
Fool, which rolled out its boards in April 1997, gets about 5,000.

Raging Bull has become a haven for investors who want to discuss OTC
Bulletin Board stocks -- shares of tiny companies that don't meet the
financial and other requirements for listing on a major exchange.

Its popularity among the OTC crowd has benefited from a decision in
November 1998 by Yahoo! Finance, another of its rivals, to drop message
boards devoted to OTC stocks.

However, Ms. Burgess says Raging Bull's popularity isn't driven solely by
discussions about OTC stocks.

"We get some strong volume on these boards, but the most active boards
are a mix, including [stocks like] WorldCom and Spyglass along with
penny stocks," she says.

Raging Bull has surpassed Silicon Investor amid many changes at Silicon
Investor that have worried and annoyed its users, including the site's
purchase by Internet portal Go2Net Inc. in 1998.

When the Go2net deal was announced, posters had complained that
Silicon Investor was giving up its independence and would become too
commercialized.

Some seasoned message board posters also complained last summer when
Silicon Investor redesigned its site and included technology that could track
a user's habits on the Internet.

Although it went online in September 1997, Raging Bull didn't get much
attention until a major redesign of its message boards in mid 1998. The site
also has expanded its forums to include sports, current events, and other
subjects.

The expanded topics have helped boost Raging Bull's total postings.
Raging Bull also is benefiting from discussion boards it has provided since
last summer for search engine Alta Vista. Alta Vista purchased Raging Bull
in February. Raging Bull's boards also can be accessed through some
financial Web sites, such as thomsoninvestment.com and forbes.com.

PR Newswire Helps Track Posters

Companies maligned by anonymous posters on the Internet are getting
some help from PR Newswire.

The news dissemination service has formed an alliance with Internet
Crimes Group, a cyber sleuthing firm in Princeton, N.J., to help its
corporate clients track down malicious posters.

ICG will help track down the persons behind anonymous online postings,
e-mail messages, and Web sites that spread rumors about a company or
try to manipulate its stock.

ICG's ten person outfit, which is largely comprised of Princeton University
graduates, uses technology and old-fashioned digging to solve the cases.
ICG 's service isn't limited PR Newswire clients.

Chairman and chief executive, Michael Allison, says ICG has done work
for about 25% of the Fortune 100 companies. He says the company has
tracked down about 75% of anonymous authors it has gone after.

interactive.wsj.com



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)7/17/2000 10:00:20 PM
From: Roger Sherman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 28311
 
Congratualations Russ!!!

A really cool job you all did once again!

And please give a big hug to your old "Go 2 (the soccer) Net" pal,
and GNET co-founder and President, John K!

Also give a big hugs to John R (an incredibly patient "guide"), Bryan (tell him he'll get his "pay-back," when he leasts expects it), Steve (who's Quigley's boss, or at least that what he told us), Mark (the main "info-man" for the GNET thread), Eric (who I'm sure is glad to no longer be Bryan's office roommate), Ethan (the main "legal-eagle" guy), Oren (not sure if you gave him a new job yet), Victor (voted by the"longs" as the "best-dressed" officer at the shareholder's meeting, and only one wearing his Levis), Quigley (levy's old fellow Speedo-wearing buddy), both SI Admin Bob & Jeff (boy, Bryan sure gave them a tough job lately!), the entire BOD, and the rest of your incredible GNET team!!!

WAY TO GO ! ! ! ! !

Oh, and please also congratulate your pal Paul, and his "main guy" Bill S. Funny thing is, I presented them both with the very last two incredibly rare "Go2Netrillionaires" buttons in existence last month at the CHTR shareholder's meeting. They gave me the strangest look. Sort of like, "Who the h*ll is this guy, and why is he giving us these silly buttons." Paul and I ended up chatting about the up-coming opening of his EMC project. KLP, Savoy, and I ended up chatting about BryanB (regarding his really sadistic behavior on the first day of the fourth month of this new millennium).

However, as the stock has "dipped-at-bit" <g> these past months I've been forced to go back to my "day-job" 24/7, so haven't posted on SI for some time. Never sold a share (a "long" till I die, most likely), and even picked up a few more shares on the recent "dips" (like the entire past 6 months <g>). I'm sure we're all (including those with a few "stock options") looking forward to see what cool things your team will come up with in days, months, and years to come. I know you believe in only doing things "right" (and please don't rush things until things are "right")! However hitting somewhere between "100-125" by New Years Eve sure wouldn't break my heart! :)

Roger #49

PS. And a special "Hi" to a few of my really (really) patient and very (very) "long" GNET cyberpals Sarkie, KLP, CarolynF, SI Sy, LRNLATN, Peach, X-Joe-O, Susan, levy, and the other half of the "Puna-and-Bro Show."



To: Russell C. Horowitz who wrote (7245)8/6/2000 2:10:32 AM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 28311
 
Our Field Operatives thank you for the dinner. The '97 jade Mountain was particularly delectable, sorry that you could not make it...