Friday, December 23, 2011

The Bounty/Booty Derived From A Harvest Production For Directory Purposes

With complex legal arguments aside, data harvesting activities by the one and the many provide sophisticated opportunity to divide/liquidate the value of a string derivative via a variety of directory-based structures.

Irrelevant of pay-to-control-content schematics, these sites aggregate data from other locations and bring it under one roof, or one brand as the circumstances may be.  For example, there are multiple sites that are constantly harvesting data from the databases provided by each Secretary of State business licensing division, court records, phone books, etc.

It is within the economic value of such data harvesting activities that grows a variety of value inflation/liquidation techniques and tactics designed to operate from within the scope of concepts such as Reputation Management and Search Engine Optimization that can capture mass quantities of traffic for the operator of such a site to then attempt to convert into literal cash, frequently via some form of a pay-per-click or pay-per-impressions schematic being deployed from within the site.

For example, product and/or service review sites rely on commentary support as a part of garnering and gathering threads of credibility as a quality content provider able to compete on their own foundations as directory service providers.  Then there is the more questionable form and format that involves the creation of a record, publication of such data and then a shout-out to the world via a mass-marketing campaign inviting people to take over ownership/control of the content being broadcast by a site.

Hazy as this subject matter may initially appear to the untrained eye, it is through complex arguments both for and against such aggregation of people and business identity data that provides the opening for this particular collection of connections to Albert M. Hochstadt.

Without going too deep into structural issues surrounding networking and algorithm tracking/tracing, the number of locations holding some semblance of factual data surrounding the business identity of ABA Hail Restoration and derivatives as listed in The 1st 2011 V Decision Tree Short List* - Hochstadt Hail Restoration.  The syndication levels of such content seems especially curious due to other factors, including lack of Top 20 ratings for other content providers, such as the news media, and is symptomatic of intentional vs. incidental reputation management conflicts arising from the challenge of an engine producing a results roster containing sufficiently relevant content relative to the search criteria.

When evaluating a string derivative, ultimately it must first become irrelevant as to whether or not the content is true or false in any capacity.  It's all about the strict tally counts derived from the presence of content containing the string derivative.