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Topic: Coinosphere.com - The Google of Bitcoin (Read 2432 times)

hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500
March 01, 2014, 09:18:33 AM
#30
THERE IS NO REPLACEMENT FOR INTELLIGENT ANALYSIS.
Are you volunteering for the job?

Try to look at this from a business perspective here. We are spending all our time cleaning large lists of indexed websites down to a few that pass incrementally stricter tests until we have something that looks decent enough to take the time to categorize & publish. I've got over 4,000 such results now, but I suspect that there are about 50,000 merchants out there taking bitcoin in total so far. (Of course that number grows daily too.)

We need to get Faster, not much slower at this if we're ever going to get anywhere near letting the world see all of the bitcoin-accepting merchants in one place.

There is already a link on each listing that lets the public report a scammer, and of course comments on the page too where I've already had two people point out scammers and I've removed them by hand.

Crowdsourcing scam-spotting is the only option I have open to me, at least while I'm not profitable yet. Unless some expert at analysis steps up to volunteer his or her time, such a position is simply going to have to wait until I far surpass being profitable and actually can afford a medium-sized business staff.

I'm all ears to your constructive criticsm, but what would really help right now is what I could do in the realm of crowdsourcing the scam-spotting. What could I provide on my site that would make hunting down these bastards fun or at least easy enough that everyone would be happy to do it?


Speed over Quality, does it ever work when the Price is free?
hero member
Activity: 526
Merit: 508
My other Avatar is also Scrooge McDuck
March 01, 2014, 08:55:03 AM
#29
THERE IS NO REPLACEMENT FOR INTELLIGENT ANALYSIS.
Are you volunteering for the job?

Try to look at this from a business perspective here. We are spending all our time cleaning large lists of indexed websites down to a few that pass incrementally stricter tests until we have something that looks decent enough to take the time to categorize & publish. I've got over 4,000 such results now, but I suspect that there are about 50,000 merchants out there taking bitcoin in total so far. (Of course that number grows daily too.)

We need to get Faster, not much slower at this if we're ever going to get anywhere near letting the world see all of the bitcoin-accepting merchants in one place.

There is already a link on each listing that lets the public report a scammer, and of course comments on the page too where I've already had two people point out scammers and I've removed them by hand.

Crowdsourcing scam-spotting is the only option I have open to me, at least while I'm not profitable yet. Unless some expert at analysis steps up to volunteer his or her time, such a position is simply going to have to wait until I far surpass being profitable and actually can afford a medium-sized business staff.

I'm all ears to your constructive criticsm, but what would really help right now is what I could do in the realm of crowdsourcing the scam-spotting. What could I provide on my site that would make hunting down these bastards fun or at least easy enough that everyone would be happy to do it?
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 522
March 01, 2014, 07:48:21 AM
#28
public voting for the biggest scammers

::headdesk::

THERE IS NO REPLACEMENT FOR INTELLIGENT ANALYSIS.

Not "looking to see if they have graphics". Not "some random schmoe says so". Not "I feel like it". Not "I'm wearing yellow shoes today."

Not anything, not now, not ever. Regardless of how many people have tried to make a replacement before (are you even the least bit aware of how many wannabe scammer lists comprised of public voting buttons are out there?). Regardless of how good your intentions are.

hero member
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My other Avatar is also Scrooge McDuck
February 27, 2014, 02:37:40 PM
#27
Game on!

As of today, Feb 27th, Coinosphere Beta is officially launched with almost 4,000 Bitcoin-accepting merchants and charities!

I do believe that makes us the largest listing of bitcoin merchants online already, but if someone knows of a larger listing please let me know.

Some of the people in this thread have inspired my next addition to Coinosphere: The ultimate bitcoin scammers list... With public voting for the biggest scammers. (Here's hoping Gox doesn't just sit at the top of that list forever. Grin)

As always, let me know if you have any questions.

full member
Activity: 144
Merit: 100
February 06, 2014, 08:15:17 PM
#26
Thanks BTCLuke, it is actually working now, don't know why I was seeing the old page before.
I'll pass the word along to my bitcoin-enabled friends! Smiley
hero member
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My other Avatar is also Scrooge McDuck
February 06, 2014, 01:03:26 AM
#25
Hi XFox, the site has been live since Jan 28th, please try refreshing your browser.

Unfortunately, we did not meet our goals for the Bitcoinstarter campaign (We only got to 40%, and you need to raise 100% to receive any of it) and therefore have fallen short on the funding we need to launch Coinosphere as originally intended.

But I'm not deterred! My solution was to open up in "Beta" status, with fewer listings and no marketing yet, to work any remaining bugs out while we get our listings in the directory slowly but surely. My search engine is popping out hundreds of new Bitcoin-accepting merchant sites every single night, but there is just no way to get them cleaned, sorted, categorized and loaded into the Coinosphere directory fast enough.

As you can see there are 2,500+ listings at this time, but before I take it out of beta status I would like to see over 10,000 listings there, and it's a matter of improving my automation processes now in order to deliver this.
full member
Activity: 144
Merit: 100
February 05, 2014, 08:42:51 PM
#24
What's the state of this project?
According to BTCLuke, site should already be online now.
Moreover, as of today it is still showing "This site will not be revealed until January 28th 2014."… Huh
hero member
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My other Avatar is also Scrooge McDuck
January 27, 2014, 04:52:56 PM
#23
Hi Lamalicious and successquik,

Thanks for your kind words.

Yes, I am opening the doors to Coinosphere.com rain or shine on Tuesday, even though that means we won't have many results filtered and readily displayed yet. The site will officially be launched as a "beta" site, because some things will be slower and with less functionality too... But just a little bit. The main problem will be the lack of all those juicy listings that Sauron has indexed already.

As for the Bitcoinstarter campaign, I have opted to push back the ending date a week so that it ends after you guys have access to Coinosphere.com and can see the promise of it for yourself, first-hand, before making a pledge on Bitcoinstarter.com.

Thanks for your patience everyone! See you tomorrow afternoon on Coinosphere.com!
newbie
Activity: 23
Merit: 0
January 23, 2014, 02:04:08 AM
#22
Wow!  I haven't been on the forum for awhile and was pleased to see that my simple question about filtering scams generated such response. 

Glad to see it being discussed as it's so very sad to see that so many people seeking to earn online are so mathematically illiterate. It's really scary.

Any old site can pop up and say, "We have a unique algorithm to trade forex, it's secret, Bill Gates doesn't know" so invest with us and we'll pay you 1% a day!

And the money pours in! Sad, so very sad.

For those of you who aren't aware there are forums that specialize on ponzi schemes, think Silk Road for the the scam world, like moneymakergroup, talkgold, etc.   These sites make money selling advertising to ponzi programs who feast on the gullibility of the financially ignorant.

And, with rise of bitcoin you'll see more and more of these scams using bitcoin. 

I don't know what the answer is, other than education (ugh, good luck with THAT) and the hope that those that control the power (search engines, advertisers, etc.) have the gumption and expertise to weed that crap out.

You can't legislate morality but you can cordon off the perpetrators of fraud (in my idyllic world anyway, LOL)

Best of luck to you BTCluke, your project is fascinating and I'll be watching with keen interest!

SQ

 
member
Activity: 148
Merit: 10
January 22, 2014, 04:37:38 AM
#21
what is going to happen if you won't reach 4 btc ? Are still going to launch a project ? :O
hero member
Activity: 526
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My other Avatar is also Scrooge McDuck
January 22, 2014, 01:47:03 AM
#20
Thanks XFox! It's appreciated.

One week to go and the remaining problems are starting to clear up... I just don't know with how many listings yet.

The indexing crawler count is over 131,000 bitcoin-accepting domains now, but again, there's a lot of questionable sites in there that needs to be manually reviewed so I'm hoping to just have between 10k & 20k listings showing on launch day.


As for scam warnings, I'm more than open to working with any provider that has a service to spot and list bitcoin scams.

If they have a list of Verified scam sites that I could simply feed that into my database, I could rip those out of my listings automatically. If they offered a service for doing so, I would even be willing to share data with them. This would be a great little business model for someone like MPOE-PR if they were feeling entrepreneurial. Wink

full member
Activity: 144
Merit: 100
January 21, 2014, 11:08:25 AM
#19
I've just pledged, thank you for this great project!
full member
Activity: 126
Merit: 100
Girls dont crypto?
January 13, 2014, 11:20:27 PM
#18
Due to unforseen technical difficulties the launch of Coinosphere will not occur tomorrow as originally planned. I apologize for getting everyone's hopes up for a launch so soon.

New Launch date set for January 28th, a 2-week delay while we work on some site problems.

The good news is that more features will be available on Coinosphere by launchtime, so hang on tight and we're sure to overdeliver!



good to see you are addressing technical difficulties before launch!
hero member
Activity: 526
Merit: 508
My other Avatar is also Scrooge McDuck
January 13, 2014, 05:47:15 PM
#17
Due to unforseen technical difficulties the launch of Coinosphere will not occur tomorrow as originally planned. I apologize for getting everyone's hopes up for a launch so soon.

New Launch date set for January 28th, a 2-week delay while we work on some site problems.

The good news is that more features will be available on Coinosphere by launchtime, so hang on tight and we're sure to overdeliver!

hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 522
January 10, 2014, 08:44:06 AM
#16
Perhaps I should reiterate that I'm not starting a review blog here; nor was I in any way trying to suggest that me and my employees are qualified to scan (in 5-10 seconds per site) to see if a site is a scam or not... With as many as a thousand new sites pouring in every hour to be checked, all I can offer as a scan against scams is the very basic most level of a look-over... But I assure you every site will be seen by human eyes.

I hope you'll be happy with this service since it is far and away much more than google does to protect you against scams showing up in their listings.

Listen. As the operator of a directory, you can either 1. purport to disallow scams, or 2. not. If you do 1, you must necessarily understand what makes something a scam, and how this can be determined. No matter how quickly you do it. No matter how much better or worse some other group is at it. No matter anything else.

If you do it anyway, you are creating a pathway through which scammy operations can paint on more appearances of validity, however small that might be, and however much it might be limited in its effects to the new and uninformed. That sucks.

Do you understand? If you don't know how to do something and you're not interested in learning how to do it, for fuck's sake don't say you're doing it. To any degree. At all.
hero member
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January 09, 2014, 10:45:17 PM
#15
There wasn't anything to "clear up" other than your demonstrated lack of understanding as to what constitutes a scam and how it can be identified. This is a problem for you to resolve, or not, but you'll have to do one or the other. Suggesting you're qualified to do it sometimes or whatever (despite being very confused about how to "spot") and pointing to how other people fail at it isn't in any way a solution.
Perhaps I should reiterate that I'm not starting a review blog here; nor was I in any way trying to suggest that me and my employees are qualified to scan (in 5-10 seconds per site) to see if a site is a scam or not... With as many as a thousand new sites pouring in every hour to be checked, all I can offer as a scan against scams is the very basic most level of a look-over... But I assure you every site will be seen by human eyes.

I hope you'll be happy with this service since it is far and away much more than google does to protect you against scams showing up in their listings.

hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 522
January 09, 2014, 09:06:00 AM
#14
Hope this clears a few things up! Thanks again for your input.

There wasn't anything to "clear up" other than your demonstrated lack of understanding as to what constitutes a scam and how it can be identified. This is a problem for you to resolve, or not, but you'll have to do one or the other. Suggesting you're qualified to do it sometimes or whatever (despite being very confused about how to "spot") and pointing to how other people fail at it isn't in any way a solution.
hero member
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My other Avatar is also Scrooge McDuck
January 08, 2014, 07:51:22 PM
#13
You miss the point. If "artwork" is a problem in terms of determining whether something is a scam of not, you're way, way out of your depth. Artwork has absolutely nothing to do with it.
Thanks for your concern, however keep in mind that Coinosphere is primarily a search engine, like google. Google does not attempt to screen out such stuff, as that would require paying for a million or so knowledgable people to read every new page on the web 24/7.

There is no way anyone can afford to spend enough time on each site to look at such factors; but I can proudly say we screen a heck of a lot more than google does because our market is still small and I want to categorize them all for fun browsing.

I'd say that we spend between 5-10 seconds on each bitcoin-verified site on average now, so in that time, if we can spot a spammy/scammy site from the front page, we'll remove it.

...And of course if the site is reported by users, which is simple to do from the "Report listing" link beside every listings' page.

Hope this clears a few things up! Thanks again for your input.
 
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 522
January 08, 2014, 08:22:33 AM
#12
Sure, I do have some automated screening going on first of course... There's a lot of junk we shouldn't even see at all, and then the remainder will be judgement calls.

You miss the point. If "artwork" is a problem in terms of determining whether something is a scam of not, you're way, way out of your depth. Artwork has absolutely nothing to do with it. Your idea is basically that deciding whether a piece of fruit is ripe or not hinges upon the visual quality of the price tag.

You have to understand how fruit is picked.

Maybe have a read here.
hero member
Activity: 854
Merit: 658
rgbkey.github.io/pgp.txt
January 07, 2014, 06:01:16 PM
#11
For the ponzis and scams, we'll do our best to spot and weed them out at the manual level. Although sometimes it can be tough to spot them if they have good marketing & artwork

...seriously?
I don't know, insanity dice was pretty convincing.
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