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


To: Puna who wrote (19799)7/1/2000 4:41:04 PM
From: levy  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 28311
 
This is known as the "fair weather long phenom". Actually I am pretty bored with this whole thing myself but I have a really boring life so it fits for me. (I feel like Middle Aged Man fron Saturday Night Life.....you know wife, kids, work and more work)

Did you notice what a sick mind Quigley has.....he conjeured up some free advertising for SI in the WSJ by faking this database problem

At Silicon Investor a Bug Posts
Identity Behind the Pseudonym
By CARRIE LEE
WSJ.COM

Ever wondered who's behind an online pseudonym? Thursday may have been your night on Silicon Investor.

Late that evening, some posters on the popular message boards were dismayed to find their log-in identifications --
often their real names and normally kept private -- were inadvertently showing up on posted messages instead of their
online aliases. It was one of many technical glitches that plagued Silicon Investor this week.

Silicon Investor (www.siliconinvestor.com) is a haven for the anonymous exchange of insider information,
management critiques and hot-stock tips. Based in Seattle, the unit of Go2Net has more than 300,000 subscribers
who pay $120 a year to post messages on the site, but anyone can read messages for free. The site gets an average of
20,000 posts a day.

Company spokeswoman Jill Munden says the problem arose briefly Thursday night. The root of the trouble was an
upgrade of Silicon Investor's database, which has since been fixed, she says.

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on how to subscribe.

"We immediately fixed the problem and have technology teams in place to ensure the continued performance of
Silicon Investor," Ms. Munden says. "We have checked or adjusted all messages posted during the affected time
period to ensure that only the user aliases are displayed."

But the company wasn't able to fix the mistake before it caused consternation among members. "I don't worry about
my log-in ID showing because my [alias] is my real name, but there are people who use aliases for legitimate
reasons: They don't want their boss to know they are posting or something," says Dennis Roth, a Silicon Investor
member who manages his portfolio for a living from Landover, Md.

The Silicon Investor Web site had a range of other technical problems because of the upgrade. Some of them
continued into Friday, although none appeared to be as serious as the log-in ID problem.

Some members received an error message when they attempted to post. Other users of the site were told that the
message they were seeking couldn't be found, or they were brought to a different message altogether. Some users
complained that the key intended to take them to previous messages didn't work.

One member complained that people who chose to respond to messages were given the opportunity to edit the
messages to which they responded, effectively changing what someone else had written.

Ms. Munden says she wasn't aware of this problem. She added that the glitches didn't allow users to access
members' account information. Passwords are required to access member's account data, and no passwords were
divulged, she says. As a fee-based site, Silicon Investor has access to users' credit-card numbers and other personal
information.

The snafu became a popular topic on Silicon Investor's boards, where many members voiced their complaints and
document problems. Two of the boards created Friday morning included "SI is broken - Post bugs here," and "SI is
collapsing - Black hole."

"Am I the only one having trouble with SI since they 'upgraded' earlier tonight? Several subjects (including this one)
have dropped off my 'SubjectMarks' list," wrote one member shortly after midnight on Thursday, referring to a
feature that lets users keep lists of frequently read boards. "All kinds of errors this morning as well as missing
messages all over the place," posted another early Friday morning.

Silicon Investor has been upgrading its database to accommodate a new software system in recent weeks. The site
informed its members that it would be offline for brief, nonmarket periods during the weeks of June 19 and June 26.

Write to Carrie Lee at: carrie.lee@wsj.com



To: Puna who wrote (19799)7/2/2000 7:57:57 PM
From: Pareto  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 28311
 
Reasons to be cheerful and graph of posts

Yes, yes we have problems with the "upgrade"

However, as an investor this is a moment to remember. Go2net is implementing a new platform that unifies all sites. And will allow all sites to operate integrated.

It is called Go2net Server Pages: GSP and you see it in the address line of every page. Check out hypermart and you'll see the same extensions.

hypermart.net

As for Silicon Investor: this graph shows the visitor numbers of the last quarter and we are going down. We have 1.000.000 posts less than last year's quarter. I think we will see one more quarter downwards. The summer is always down, because people spend time outdoors. It will give Go2net time to introduce the new features that are on the list for months. The fourth quarter we go get them!

Graph with posts per quarter:
10sites.com

Kind regards,
Pareto