Corfman Clan wrote:firennice wrote:A note about the advertisements.
Advertising is one of the steps that make a site commercial in the eyes of Groundspeak. Once they are added, they will not allow links from the geocaching web pages, or mention of the site on the pages. (the dgp point links, links to the site etc.)
There is nothing in the agreements with Groundspeak that would preclude API users from making a buck or two. So, I'm not sure why you think that. At any rate, that's not my understanding and I've never received any communication from Groundspeak to cause me to worry about that.
Now that's an interesting conundrum I hadn't thought of that Firennice as a cache reviewer (BlueRajah) would pick up on. Adding advertisements to LonelyCache.com would make it appear to be a commercial site or headed in that direction. Merchandising definitely would make LonelyCache fall into that category. Neither of those violate Corfman Clan's agreement with Groundspeak regarding the use of the API. What would change, though, is that
Cache Owners would be in violation of the Geocache Listing Requirements/Guidelines if that have a link on their cache page pointing to a commercial site, e.g. a LonelyCache Point badge made with the Link Maker, should LonelyCache be deemed to be a commercial site.
Granted, when a cache is first published, there is no LonelyCache link to be made, so a reviewer isn't going to see a hyperlink leading to a commercial site. (I suppose the CO could copy an example <a>...</a> code and replace his GC number and cache name in the HTML. I wonder if the site is setup to catch cases where an image is requested for a cache not in the database?) But anyway, the link would typically be added after publication, so a "commercial" link of this sort would only be caught if the cache come to a reviewer's or Lackey's attention.
The relevant guideline is
here, or paraphrased:
Geocache Listing Requirements / Guidelines wrote:Section II Paragraph 1.2.4. Solicitation and Commercial Content
...
Commercial content is disallowed.
Cache listings perceived as commercial will not be published. A commercial cache listing has one or more of the following characteristics:
- ...
- It contains links to businesses, agencies, commercial advertisers, charities, or political or social agendas.
- It contains the logo of a business or organization, including non-profit organizations.
- It contains the name of a business or commercial product.
The guideline does not prohibit a cache owner from adding a commercial link to a listing after it has been published, but obviously that would be violating the spirit of the law. And Groundspeak retains the right to do whatever they wish with their site and change their terms of agreement on a whim.
I'd like to see the site be able to sustain itself, and I'd like to be able to link to it from my cache pages. It would be unfortunate if those two desires were incompatible....
gjhiker wrote:In my opinion having these obnoxious ads on the pages DOES detract from the experience. They are bad enough when along the side of the page but particularly annoying when in the body of the text. I can't believe these garbage ads produce any income. I NEVER click on ads on a web-page much less on ads for "Used & Refurb Computers, Sony VAIO T Series, Military Records Lookup, Colorado Mountain College, Christian Counseling, Leadership Circle, LLC", which appeared on a page I was looking at. I would much rather pay a subscription fee than look at this garbage.
I have to agree here about the placement. I very much dislike the ads in the middle of the stats, though the vertical banner on the right doesn't bug me too much. I also never click on ads -- neither the annoying irrelevant ones nor the creepy "I know your browsing/search history" ones -- except specifically as a token click like I did when I saw my first ad here. If it were me, I'd place a single unobtrusive banner at the bottom of each page, below the footer, and see what revenue it generates over a reasonable period of time. (Winter is the off-season for most lonely caches, so I'd predict the next three months would have significantly less traffic than May-October.)
I like the idea of LonelyCache branded merchandise too, but if that makes hyperlinks to the site incompatible with the cache placement guidelines, maybe a PBS-like fundraising model would work. Quarterly or semi-annually, set up a donation page (and nagging top-banner
a la Wikipedia) for a month or two weeks. People who contribute certain levels of donations can receive certain items or choice of items (probably not a branded tote bag). When the donation period closes, you'd only need to order the quantity you need, distribute once, and hold no quantity on-hand. If it makes sense to order in minimum lot sizes, those extra items can be given away first during the next contribution period. Just an idea...