Hitting the Jackpot
By: The Spider
In the online marketing game sometimes you win big and other times it's
a total crapshoot.
CPA Empire CEO Scott Richter
won $60,000 while in Las Vegas
attending the Affiliate Summit.
Of course, he had to spend $20,000 to
get the $60,000 payout. The windfall
came at a good time since Richter was
slapped with a hefty lawsuit by MySpace,
which claimed Richter promoted websites
that sold ringtones, clothing, TMobile
Sidekick 3 devices and more with
spammed messages sent from one
MySpace user to another.
Basically, this practice made it look as
though a friend on MySpace was showing
you a link to get a ringtone when that
friend didn't actually send the information
– Richter, the self-proclaimed "spam
king" did.
The lawsuit, filed in the Central
District of California, claims Richter's
companies (OptInRealBig.com, CPA
Empire.com and Media Breakaway)
arranged for millions of bulletins to be
sent through MySpace during the last
six months of 2006. MySpace also
claims Richter is in breach of contract
and unfair competition, specifically saying
the defendants violated The
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, The
CAN-SPAM act, The Electronic
Communications Privacy Act and
California's Anti-Spam Statute.
In 2004 OptInRealBig.com and
Richter reached a settlement with then-
New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer
in another spam-related lawsuit. Richter
subsequently filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
in 2005.
There are others that may also have
some issues with the feds. Several folks in
the online marketing space received
knocks on their doors in early February. It
wasn't thugs threatening harm (see
Revenue January/February 2007, page
86), but rather, agents working for the
Office of the Attorney General for the
state of Florida in search of information
about shady affiliate marketers. Azoogle
and Jon from the
WickedFire.com
forum reportedly
received visits. Jon
had two agents
from the Florida
AG office and two
from the New
York AG's office.
The feds are
looking to bring
to justice those involved in questionable
marketing efforts related to ringtone
offers, including CPA networks.
The bad behavior includes cramming
(adding charges without consumer's
knowledge), manipulation of landing
pages and deceptive marketing offers
that claim products are free – even
when there is a fee charged.
If you know anything at all, contact
Robert Schara, a financial investigator
for the Office of the Attorney General
for the state of Florida, who can be
reached at robert_schara@oag.state.fl.us
or at 850-414-3300.
And speaking of bad actors….
Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne speaking
on last quarter's conference call: "We
have been through tough times. '06 was
a wipeout year. And there was a lot of
pain, but a lot of it – all the pain of tightening
the belt and resizing our expense
structure, we got our infrastructure
fixed, but our expense structure still isn't
there. But we have already taken steps
at the end of the year and the first part of
this year. We have made most of the decisions
and made some of the changes.
And there is – we just have to carry them
out in the next few months." One of the
plans for the future is to add social media
tools to its site.
Getting social is one of The Spider's
favorite pastimes, and the Affiliate
Summit was a perfect place for that
interaction. With more than 2,000
attendees, I ran into lots of old friends
and familiar faces in Vegas. Unlike the
neon of Sin City which keeps shining
brightly it seems like the star power of
some early affiliate-marketing leaders
has dimmed a bit. Jeff Molander didn't
attend the conference after a bit of a fallout
with event co-founder Shawn
Collins over emcee duties. And
Riya.com's Beth Kirsch, once the self-proclaimed
maven of the affiliate space,
seemed very low profile. Maybe that's
why she hasn't made a blog entry on
ReveNews.com since mid-December.
Being in the loop is crucial. If you're
not, you might end up caught off guard
like TaxBrain.com, which was less than
thrilled to see that Commission Junction
had brought a couple of other tax-related
companies (read: big rivals) including
Turbo Tax into the network fold.
Keep me in the loop by sending
some hot industry gossip or juicy information
my way. I want the real dirt and
if I use your tip in the next column, I'll
send you a Revenue T-shirt. Email me at
TheSpider@RevenueToday.com or call
the hotline directly at 415-732-7456.
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