Yahoo Considers Offering Prizes to Search Users 100
Bemmu writes "According to the San Francisco Chronicle: 'Yahoo Inc. is considering offering free music downloads, discounts on DVD rentals and frequent-flier miles to users who make the Web site their primary search engine.'" More from the article: "Offering rewards to search engine users isn't new. During the dot-com boom in the late 1990s, a number of companies including AllAdvantage.com and MyPoints.com gave cash, prizes and loyalty points to users, although many of the companies eventually went out of business or were sold at fire sale prices. That's not to say the model never works. One exception is iWon.com, a Web portal that offers cash prizes for using the site. After some success during the boom, iWon is now owned by Ask Jeeves and its parent company IAC/InterActiveCorp. " Update: 02/12 21:07 GMT by Z : Headline changed for accuracy.
Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:5, Insightful)
Why do the editors of Slashdot feel the need to spin stories so that the headlines read like it's actually news? Someone mentioned this to the press and suddenly it's headlines that they're doing it. Please don't fall victim to the ways of other news providers, that's why I read Slashdot because it's not using shock reporting to get my attention.
Yahoo wants this. You're a tool if you print it like this.
"Stay tuned for a very special local Fox affiliate news report about how just going to school can be harmful for your children. They may already be dead! Find out how at nine."
Re:Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:1)
Yahoo Offering Prizes to Search Users
The sad thing is-- the way I read it, Yahoo is encouraging people to go through their customer's stuff by rewarding them with prizes.
Re:Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:2)
Granted, many other news sources aren't much better. But let's keep these debates to Taco's posts on gathering feedback.
Re:Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:2)
That can never happen, right?
I was going to moderate you funny, but an inkling tells me you're actually serious.
Re:Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:2)
Re:Another Spin to Grab Attention (Score:1)
Slashdotters are equally guilty of complaining about imaginary problems as they are quick to point out each other's mistakes. Such is the circle of life.
Re:first (Score:2, Insightful)
Blingo! (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Blingo! (Score:2)
Re:Blingo! (Score:2)
Re:Blingo! (Score:2)
Yay Slashdot mods.
*burns karma for going offtopic*
Re:Blingo! (Score:1)
Re:Blingo! (Score:2, Informative)
I can see it working. (Score:2)
I would not be surpr
Re:Blingo! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Blingo! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Blingo! (Score:2)
Re:Blingo! (Score:2)
http://www.krunk4ever.com/blog/?p=5 [krunk4ever.com]
There are some caveats. Only your 1st 10 searches per day qualify for a win. For someone like me, that makes those 10 searches within the hour it strucks past midnight, it doesn't really give me any advantage to continue using Blingo after my initial 10 searches. Also, as more people join, the # of prizes and the frequency of the p
Re:Blingo! (Score:3, Insightful)
Full disclosure: they're friends of mine, but I have no business interest with them. Just immense respect.
Re:Blingo! (Score:1)
Re:Those (Score:2)
A9 amazon discount (Score:1)
It is a wonderful search engine. It is based on Google for normal search but you can add extra panels and having it use diffferent vehichles.
Doing a Wikipedia search concurrently with a general search is in my oppinion the best of both worlds.
Re:A9 amazon discount (Score:2)
>add extra panels and having it use diffferent vehichles.
>
Gosh, pluggable search-engine modules, what an innovative idea. Someone should tell Apple [wikipedia.org] or the Firefox people [tns.net] about this, perhaps they could implement it on the client. Then your choice of search engines would be entirely up to the user, rather than being selected from a range pre-picked from selected partners of the search site...
Re: (Score:2)
Re:A9 amazon discount (Score:1, Funny)
Full List of Prizes (Score:1, Informative)
Yahoo is considering free offers, discounts and rewards to users of its search engine. Here are some of the possible incentives listed in a recent survey of Yahoo's customers:
Five free music downloads per month
Donations to charity (of users' choice)
Unlimited Yahoo mail storage (instead of 1 GB)
Discounted personals (one free month and $19.95 per month thereafter, instead of $24.95)
Frequent-flier miles (250 per month)
Source: Chronicle research
Re:Full List of Prizes (Score:2)
no thanks. (Score:1, Insightful)
Free trip to Guantanamo Bay (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Free trip to Guantanamo Bay (Score:2)
I'm holding out for one of those extraordinary renditions^Wvacations to the Middle East
Re:Free trip to Guantanamo Bay (Score:2)
Actually, their latest addition to the prize bonanza is a trip to China for 10 years in a "re-education" camp... Lovely accomodations with 5000 of your closest friends, all the rice you can eat, and to finance the whole thing you make cheap leather wallets and kids toys.
Re:Free trip to Guantanamo Bay (Score:1)
iWon worked well for a brief period (Score:5, Interesting)
I would attribute the brief success of iWon to it functioning well, rather than the gimmicks.
Re:iWon worked well for a brief period (Score:1)
I never used it myself, but my Dad had actually signed up with them, I guess thinking that he was surely the next big-money winner. I had no idea what iWon was all about, until I ran AdAware on his machine, and turned up some 400+ tracking cookies--from iWon alone. All in all there were 678 objects (the number still stands out in my head!), who knows how many of the extras were precipitated from 'registering' with iWon's advertisers.
I hope Yahoo! has differen
Re:iWon worked well for a brief period (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:iWon worked well for a brief period (Score:2)
-l
Frequent-users miles (Score:5, Interesting)
So if you searched while logged in (then Yahoo! doesn't even need forever-cookie to track a user's activity), you will accumulate some credits and when you have reached certain threshold, you can exchange for things that you actually want.
Speaking of cookies (Score:1)
Re:Speaking of cookies (Score:2)
These credits are awarded based on keywords. For example, searching "Google Rocks" might give you $0.00001, searching "Google Sucks" might give you $0.001.
And this opens up marketing (not advertising) opportunities, where companies will bid for keywords to reward users who searched for them. It's almost like Google Adsense except this one rewards users who searched for them.
Re:Frequent-users miles (Score:2)
How long would it take to write a little bot to search for random stuff at a high rate giving a specific user all the credit? How long to create 10,000 accounts, all vectored through AOL since they're kind enough to obfuscate your IP address, and spread that searching o
Re:Frequent-users miles (Score:2)
Anyway, to trick the program he was surfing, he wrote a simple WinAPI program that moved the mouse every few seconds, perhaps later versions actually clicked on links, don't know.
I think the most he ever got in a check was like $27 one month, but I
"considering"! (Score:2, Redundant)
Chinese dinners (Score:3, Funny)
market strategy (Score:1)
This is one of the oldest marketing tricks around (Score:1)
This is one of the oldest tricks in the marketing field. The companies doing business are clever in taking advantage of this human weakness. That is exactly what is happening in the internet arena too. And yahoo is leading the way in pulling pot
equally != better (Score:1)
There is equal. There is better. There is no equally better.
qz
Re:equally != better (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I may just be tired today (Score:1)
Re:I may just be tired today (Score:2)
Will a basic pat-down and frisk be enough, or do I have to get a flashlight and gloves?
Seems to be that would depend on who the searchee was.... (and hot they were).go'head (Score:2, Funny)
MyPoints? (Score:2)
Re:MyPoints? (Score:2)
Re:MyPoints? (Score:1)
Not worth it (Score:2, Interesting)
Not worth it. Let them track someone else. Then the next time the subpoena wagon rolls through town they can hang them, not me.
qz
Re:Not worth it (Score:2)
Yahoo will automatically forward the price to your next of kin if you happen to be a Chinese dissident that they turn in.
Screw Yahoo. Better to pull out of a market than get people killed for speaking up.
Firefox extensions.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Firefox extensions.. (Score:1)
Re:Firefox extensions.. (Score:1)
FREE Air Miles? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:FREE Air Miles? (Score:2)
Can they really be that clueless? (Score:3, Insightful)
Posted at C|Net (Score:2)
http://news.com.com/2061-10811_3-6037090.html [com.com]
The C|Net article includes a screenshot showing what incentives Yahoo! is considering offering, as well as this text:
This got me thinking... (Score:1)
Since Verizon is trying to get Google to pay for use of their network (I don't agree with this happening, but for the sake of the argument keep reading), maybe they could consider becoming partners and Google could offer a free month of DSL through Verizon as one of the incentives...which could possibly bring more Google users to Verizon as customers...
If this happens, I better get credit for the idea.
Happy Days? (Score:1)
They're getting on the Blingo bandwagon, no? (Score:3)
Mostly, I've just found it to be a good way to pick up a couple free iTunes gift certificates :)
I think that the model of accumulating "points" just ends up being more of a pain than it's worth.
Confidence inspiring (Score:1)
I explained that I used Google b/c I trust Google, and I don't trust Yahoo. But now that they may bribe me to use their service, I may change my mind. Nothing inspires trust like a kickback.
Google rewards with results (Score:1)
This sounds desperate (Score:2)
Oh great! (Score:1)
Consumerism....the evil that enslaves you.
Chinese Journalists (Score:2)
P.