Bulbous, Not Tapered

Foo-fu and other favorites…

ICDSoft Wrapup

As previously mentioned, I did decide to migrate to a new domain and webhost. In addition to the comment left in response to my original ICDSoft commentary, an ICDSoft representative contacted me via e-mail. The message conveyed considerable distress over my post and also mentioned an unspecified potential terms of use violation. Although the representative suggested that ICDSoft would never consider censorship of its users, the choice to address possible policy violations in a conversation about critical content was distressing to me.

Even though there have been no tangible repercussions from the incident with ICDSoft, the experience has made it clear to me that my actions can reflect on and impact other members of the lococo.org community in unintended ways. Migrating my content into its own namespace will channel future feedback directly to me and prevent possible confusion about whose opinion is being represented.

New Home

Even though cool uri’s don’t change, I’m in the process of moving to a new home at mikelococo.com for reasons I’ll elucidate on shortly. The new site is already live (it looks just like the old one), and next week I’ll tear things down on lococo.org. After that happens, visitors who come here looking for me will be redirected the the corresponding page on the new site. Hopefully it will all be fairly seamless.

ICDSoft Rocks (not)!

Update: Shortly after this post, I stopped using ICDSoft as a host due to this incident. Read ICDSoft wrapup for details. In short, they contacted me privately in an an email that conveyed considerable distress over my post. While they claimed that they would never consider attempting to censor their users, they also chose that conversation to mention an unspecified terms of use violation that I might have made. While nothing more came of the discussion and there were no tangible consequences, I decided it was time to move on after that.

ICDSoft isn’t giving me $200 to shill for their hosting services but they are paying ten other lucky folks, according an announcement sent to customers on 3/8/2006 via the news section of their hosting control panel (bold sections are my emphasis):

March 8th, 2006 | A “Thank You” to our loyal customers!

Over the past few years, ICDSoft has grown steadily to reach more than 70,000 domains hosted. We fully recognize that a big part of our success is the words of recommendation sent out by our existing customers to other potential clients all over the world. We realize that these recommendations are the best advertisement we could ever have. For this reason, we have decided to extend our gratitude to our customers by rewarding the best reviews of our hosting services.

Such an undertaking was not an easy task however. We started out by seeking and collecting all the reviews of our services that have been posted over the years. An ever bigger challenge was deciding which were the best. All reviews were assessed with several factors in mind: the objectivity of the information provided, the writing style, the popularity of the web site it is posted on, and others. After a great deal of analysis, we have chosen to reward each of the following reviews with $200:

  1. http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=473518
  2. http://www.DiabeticMommy.com/hosting.htm
  3. http://www.besthostratings.com/web-hosting/reviews/icdsoft-Reviews.html#hostreview3905
  4. http://www.besthostratings.com/web-hosting/reviews/icdsoft-Reviews3.html#hostreview3365
  5. http://www.besthostratings.com/web-hosting/reviews/icdsoft-Reviews3.html#hostreview3276
  6. http://wordpress.org/support/topic/20562#post-177232
  7. http://www.besthostratings.com/web-hosting/reviews/icdsoft-Reviews3.html#hostreview3277
  8. http://webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=475347
  9. http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?threadid=345718 (http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showpost.php?p=2656502)

It is important to note that we found many other fantastic reviews, but could not reward them because the domain name of the poster was not provided in the review. We are also sure that there were many reviews out there that we simply could not find. If you have posted a review about our services, you can tell us about it through the “Submit a review” link on the left pane of your hosting Control panel.

We are planning to express our gratitude in a similar fashion in the future as well. Thank you once again for your support!

ICDSoft Team

They don’t explicitly state that they’re paying for positive reviews, but if you follow the listed links it’s clear that they’re not paying for negative ones. You’ve got to wonder if this is the first time they’ve done this, or just the first time they’ve made an official announcement about it. This site is hosted on icdsoft (so if it disappears next week you’ll know why), and they actually are a pretty decent value-oriented host. It almost seems odd that they would need to resort to astroturfing, but increasingly I find that no amount of moral turpitude will surprise me.

Comment from ICDSoft Supervisor, manually copied over from Wordpress:

Hi,

I recently came upon your post here and I was flattered by its title “ICDSoft Rocks!” > I would like to assure you that your site will not “disappear”, despite the comments you have made.

Regarding your comments for rewarding only positive reviews:

Well, we were unable to find any negative ones out there. Furthermore, if there were negative reviews about our company across the Internet we would not have the extra $2000 at our disposal to give away as rewards :).

In case you had some negative experience with our company, please let us know or post about it here at your blog.

Thank you! ICDSoft Supervisor

My Response comment:

Although I left it unsaid in my original post, the root problem with your paid-review program is lack of transparency. None of the “testimonials” disclaim their financial affiliation with ICDSoft, and folks that read them have no way of knowing that they are paid advertising. Additionally, your announcement of intent to “reward” additional testimonials potentially turns all of your customers into paid, covert market-droids.

This is similar to (although more brazen and dishonest than) referral programs like Dreamhost has been using for some time. They work well until it becomes clear that the flood of positive reviews is being generated by greedy fools caught up in a pyramid scheme rather than genuinely happy customers. The sad truth in this case is that ICDSoft already has many genuinely happy customers offering honest testimonials, but these will become increasingly difficult to ferret out as the paid-review and referral programs become successful. Like Dreamhost, exaggerated reviews will eventually give ICDSoft a reputation as a budget host that promises more than it can deliver.

But referral programs appear to be here to stay. The one thing ICDSoft can do, is to ensure that any such program requires participants to disclose their financial affiliation. This may at least make it possible for independent goodwill to continue to exist alongside your buzz-generating machine.

In spite of disagreeing wholeheartedly with your payment-for-praise program, I applaud you for addressing my comments with a constructive response. It’s far too common to see businesses react to criticism by attempting censorship, and it would have been very easy to take that approach in this case. It shows a lot of faith in your service and business model to openly respond to criticism, and perhaps the market will bear out your faith.

Mike

P.S. In the absence of some sort of internet-wide identity authentication system, you’d make it easier for folks like me accept your status as an authentic ICDSoft rep by posting from an ICDSoft IP, rather than a medicom-bg.net system.

New Skin for the Old Ceremony

So the new site skin is up and I’m fairly happy with it. It’s based on Wuhan 0.4, with a short javascript lifted from Gespaa. I made lots of small changes, most notably folding the menubar into the header image and switching the layout to a one-column format.

I’ve also enabled comments again. I turned them off almost immediately after starting the site when I had blog spam problems, but it has become increasingly clear to me that this site exists primarily in order to solicit feedback and it does a poor job of that with comments disabled.

If anyone finds the theme interesting, I’ve packaged it up to make it easy to use with WordPress 2.x. To install, download wuhan_lococo-0.4.1.zip, unzip, upload into /wp-content/themes/, and select it as your default theme in the wp-admin interface. If you’re new to using themes in WordPress, check out the official theme documentation or leave a question in the comments.

Update, 4/25/05: There’s now a project page for the theme at http://mikelococo.com/projects/wucoco where you can find more information as well as downloads for the latest packaged version.

Upgrading WordPress

Beware of drastic changes in the appearance of the site while I’m fixing it up over the next few days. There may also be short outages while I perform upgrades to the backend.