Web Two > PayPerPost Chronicles Their Amorality

http://www.techcrunch.com [Techcrunch] That responsibility falls on the blogger, not on PayPerPost. I’m always honest when I blog, I disclose the posts are paid (although I don’t think it’s necessary to disclose as long as I am honest), the overwhelming majority of my posts are not paid posts, I try to keep it interesting and relevant, and the collected funds will go to charity.

Some related posts from Technorati and Google.

[Blog.cws.net] Everything Internet Blog: Web2.0: PayPerPost.com: function BlogThis() {Q='';x=document;y=window;if(x.selection) {Q=x.selection.createRange().text;} else if (y.getSelection) { Q=y.getSelection();} else if (x.getSelection) { Q=x.getSelection();}popw = y.open('http://www.blogger.com/blog_this.pyra?t=' + escape(Q) + '&u=' + escape(location.href) + '&n=' + escape(document.title),'bloggerForm','scrollbars=no,width=475,height=300,top=175,left=75,status=yes,resizable=yes');void(0);}Create a Link

http://slashstar.com [Slashstar.com] Loosely Coupled // Tim Marman's Weblog : PayPerPost.com pays ...: If I disclose that I was paid for this particular review, and I'm honest and credible in the review, should it matter that the reason for writing the review was this promise of payment?

[Socialtwister.com] Socialtwister 2.0 » Blog Archive » PayPerPost Raises 3M - Is That ...: […] This analysis seems incredibly appropriate in light of the discussion we’re seeing swirl around not only PayPerPost (1,2,3) but also the related sorties surrounding “blogging vs journalism” and “Edelman vs blogging“.

Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, ,