Google Answers was an online knowledge market offered by Google that allowed users to post bounties for well researched answers to their queries. Asker-accepted answers cost $2 to $200. Google retained 25% of the researcher's reward and a 50 cent fee per question. In addition to the researcher's fees, a client who was satisfied with the answer could also leave a tip of up to $100. In late November 2006, Google reported that it planned to permanen...
more
Read article at Wikipedia
Google Answers
top ↑
Similar topics in Freebase
-
Brunching Shuttlecocks
The Brunching Shuttlecocks is a humor web site that ran from June 1997 to March 2003. Its main contributors were Lore Sjöberg and Dave Neilsen and it ran under the motto "Pure and Simple as a Hammer to the Forebrain." In interviews, Lore has stated that he was tired of hearing his friends talk... -
TV Tome
TV Tome was a U.S. based website devoted to informational guides for English-language television shows and the people involved in their production. It was run mainly by volunteer editors, with the assistance of user contributions. The site was founded by John Nestoriak III, who gave the founders of... -
Movie Tome
Movie Tome was the sister site for TV Tome, now the CNET website TV.com. Whereas TV Tome had TV shows and people pages, Movie Tome had movie guides. The website was created no later than August 2003 (the earliest archive) by John Nestoriak III, and was owned by Collaborative Content, LLC which was... -
JenniCam
Jennifer Kaye Ringley (born August 10, 1976) is an Internet personality and former lifecaster. She is known for creating the popular website JenniCam. Previously, live webcams transmitted static shots from cameras aimed through windows or at coffee pots. Ringley's innovation was simply to allow... -
Yahoo! Internet Life
Yahoo! Internet Life was a monthly magazine published by Ziff-Davis, which licensed the name from Yahoo!, the well-known search engine website. It was created and launched by Barry Golson, the former executive editor of Playboy and TV guide. It dealt with the emerging Internet and computer culture... -
Cartoon Orbit
Cartoon Orbit was an online gaming network created by Turner Online to promote its shows and partners. The original site was registered in May 2000, with the beta phase ending in September. Cartoon Orbit officially opened to the public in October 2000. After countless glitches went unfixed,... -
Myplay
-
Media Whores Online
Media Whores Online, also known as mediawhoresonline.com or The Horse or often just MWO, was a left-wing American political webzine that operated as a media watchdog. The site operated from 2000 until early 2004, and quickly established a reputation for quotability. By 2002 James Carville and Paul... -
Ohthehumanity
Ohthehumanity.com, referred to in-page as "Oh, the Humanity!" was a movie review webpage launched in 1996 and dedicated to "the WORST movies on Earth." The page, run by two college age males identifying themselves as "Alan and Rob," initially began as a collection of reviews of movies traditionally... -
The Wikipedia Review