Humility is a virtue
For the past couple of weeks, the talk of the blogosphere has been about Scot Smith. He’s the guy behind RSSXplosion.com, which is a service that offers bloggers the chance to buy RSS subscribers. Bloggers around the world have been outspoken in denouncing the service as uber-evil, but is it the service itself that people are against or is it Scot?
Scot’s RSSXplosion offers a service that some people want. Despite many bloggers publicly lambasting this service, some have quietly taken Scot up on his offer. The problem is that Scot’s service is all about misleading people.
Scot left a comment on a blog inferring that I was a hypocrite because I’ve sold text links before, but the business of selling text links and passing on Page Rank is open and in the public. Doctoring RSS numbers is closed and conceited. No blogger who uses Scot’s service is going to come out and say they have a fake RSS count, whereas almost all bloggers are very up front about selling links.
The real problem with Scot is that he’s acted so aggressive throughout this whole ordeal. His defensive reactions to criticism have been childish at best. Scot’s lack of people skills and common sense will ultimately be his downfall. Using bloggers’ names to substantiate his claims was a mistake too.
If a blogger’s RSS count is to become the new Page Rank, as many have suggested, there will be increasing demand for services like RSSXplosion – it’s inevitable. This isn’t something that is going to just disappear. 45n5 wrote recently that an RSS subscriber is worth about $30. While you could theoretically buy 1,000 RSS subscribers and put your blog on the market, you have to remember that a large RSS count on its own is worthless. You also stray into fraud territory by selling a blog with fake RSS numbers.
You won’t get anywhere by buying RSS subscribers – you’d be better off spending the money on links or advertising space. We’ve seen it time and time again recently when bloggers have been called out only to act with hostility toward the whole blogosphere. That’s not the way to do business.
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Digg it for goodness sake! Stumble your heart out!





