﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Silicon Investor - Goodbye Jill</title><copyright>Copyright © 2026 Knight Sac Media.  All rights reserved.</copyright><link>https://www.siliconinvestor.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=23479</link><description>
A place to say your farewell's to our favorite Webmistress.  Friday, October 30, 1998 Exclusive: Silicon Investor's Sheriff Lady departs  Jill McKinney, all-powerful Webmistress of Silicon Investor's raucous bulletin boards, tells Money.com why she is hanging up her holster  By Borzou Daragahi  pathfinder.com (Jill's picture!)  For the last two years, Jill McKinney has been a solitary soldier in the army of good taste and Internet decorum, standing guard in a watchtower over the millions of messages posted to the mammoth Silicon Investor stock-discussion Web site (http://www.techstocks.com) and booting out folks who broke the rules.  The legendary Webmistress of the 100,000-member SI, she has broken up ferocious online fights, ejected shameless pitchmen, and stepped in to warn countless users about cussing, vulgarity and ad hominem attacks. For her efforts, she has received death threats, marriage proposals, a dozen roses, and even accusations of impersonating a woman. "She's a babe," says Chester Lee, a San Francisco chemist who met McKinney at a party (everyone knew who Jill was) and has since become a pal.  As Money.com caught up with the number three player at SI, the first employee hired by co-founders Brad and Jeff Dryer, the 27-year-old Birmingham, Ala. native was thinking about marriage and what to do with her cut of the $35 million in stock Seattle-based Go2Net (Nasdaq: GNET) paid in June to buy the booming financial discussion board.   McKinney's packing her bags. Gone are the days when she sat home listening to Rush and Elton John in her pajamas while answering floods of user Email and patiently waiting for the Dryer brothers to cut her paycheck. "It's not because they didn't have the money," she recalls. "It's because they forgot."   McKinney will soon hand over her linguistic enforcer badge to her assistant, Bob Zunbrunnen, whom she recruited as a poster on her boards. And yes, fans, in December she's going to marry that boy, Go2Net ad salesman Nate "Lou" Munden, then move to New York City to do public relations work for the company.   Alas, McKinney is growing up. Six years after dropping out of South Alabama University, she's a player at a company with a $111.6 million market capitalization that actually is big enough to worry about things like public relations and lawsuits. "We've gone from three people who didn't think we were going to be around in 3 to 6 months to a corporate environment," McKinney says.   "When we were independent, we would just laugh at lawsuit threats! We didn't have any money! Brad and Jeff were sleeping on the floor. I was living in this awful basement studio apartment and we are all wearing the same T-shirts everyday!"   McKinney's role as moderator and conflict-resolution specialist on the frontiers of new media has no offline parallel, save playground monitor - in a schoolyard where all of the kids are big and vociferous. Even SI's policing of its threads is an exception to the general unruliness of Int...</description><image><url>https://www.siliconinvestor.com/images/Logo380x132.png</url><title>SI - Goodbye Jill</title><link>https://www.siliconinvestor.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=23479</link><width>380</width><height>132</height></image><ttl>10</ttl></channel></rss>