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02/14/05 3:19 PM

#358642 RE: marketmaven #358638

Cramer... otherwise known as the pumperanddumper par-excellence
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Alexander

02/14/05 4:53 PM

#358701 RE: marketmaven #358638

I have never heard a person who says so much non-sense or I might just not understand him.

I remember 10 years ago first seeing him on CNBC. I didn't know much about investing, but listening to him gave me a headache and made me wonder what exactly he was saying. It's a mystery to me that CNBC still has a show with him...I guess that says a lot about CNBC

alexander
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lee kramer

02/14/05 5:27 PM

#358708 RE: marketmaven #358638

Hi M.mavem: I gotta support Jim Cramer. Our styles are very dissimilar, but I've always found him to be a straight-shooter, even when he's wrong. He made a ton of money when the Street.com went public. He can be obnoxious,annoying and abrasive...but he's got passion. As for CNBC, they simply have too much air time to fill. I can't watch it, with the exception of Barry...I forget his last name, but he's pretty sharp about interest rates and mortgages; and Ralph Bloch, a pretty sharp longer-term technician.
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Alexander

02/15/05 8:14 AM

#358811 RE: marketmaven #358638


http://crm.ittoolbox.com/news/dispnews.asp?i=126473&t=99&p=2

SAN FRANCISCO - Like thousands of other merchants, Tammy Harrison thought she had struck gold when hordes visited her Web site by clicking on the small Internet ads she purchased from the world's most popular online search engines.

It cost Harrison as much as $20 for each click, but the potential new business seemed to justify the expense.

Harrison's delight dimmed, though, when she realized the people clicking on her ads weren't really interested in her products.

She was being victimized by "click fraud," a scam that threatens to squelch the online advertising boom that has been enriching Google Inc., Yahoo Inc. and their many business partners.

The ruse has different twists, but the end result is usually the same: Merchants are billed for fruitless traffic generated by someone who repeatedly clicks on an advertiser's Web link with no intention of ever buying anything.

Harrison figures she has spent about 200 hours documenting the mischief that drained her budget and diverted customers to a competitor, costing her an estimated $100,000 in sales.

"Click fraud has gotten out of control," said Harrison, who sells computer software to doctors. "It's stealing money from my pocket. It's just as bad as someone walking into a store and taking a television."

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Click fraud is like a big elephant standing in the middle of the living room," said Lisa Wehr, president of Oneupweb, a search engine advertising consultant. "Everyone sees it and knows it's there, but no one is quite sure what to do about it."

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Stricchiola believes it's only a matter of time before advertisers become so exasperated with click fraud that they file a class-action lawsuit against a major search engine.