voipnow.org — If you offer ISP, email and/or hosting services, VoIP should be the next addition to your business' roster of features. Don't be intimidated by this new technology, either. You no longer need an IT degree or a small fortune to become a VoIP provider.
May 14, 2007 View in Crawl 4
mmaeirMay 15, 2007
I definitely agree with the observation there, that the best way to do that is to offer VoIP as an enhanced service to your existing customer base. While I am not surprised that they did not cover the Flat Planet Phone Company since we are still in beta and keeping a low profile, we do have a unique offering compared to the other companies profiled there. VoIP Now, divides the providers in to two categories, resellers and affiliates.Resellers need to invest more in order to make a larger profit. While affiliates can make a small percentage with almost zero investment. The Flat Planet advantage is that you can become a reseller with an affiliate size investment. Right now we are offering a free beta program. For more info contact us at beta @ flatplanetphone.com .
Closed AccountMay 16, 2007
Who is the submitter of this story? His name is Neil Patel, a black hat SEO blogger from this website: <a class="user" href="http://www.pronetadvertising.com/about/">http://www.pronetadvertising.com/about/</a> and this one <a class="user" href="http://mashable.com/consulting.">http://mashable.com/consulting.</a> He and his group are known for gaming digg. He accepts monetary payments to submit stories to digg that promote notorious spam and SEO sites. Recently he said digg was censoring him, but it was the good digg users who've had enough of him and his SEO friends, so they bury his veiled spam.Some of his spam stories:<a class="user" href="http://digg.com/offbeat_news/Warning_Thousands_of_Jellyfish_Invading_Hawaii">http://digg.com/offbeat_news/Warning_Thousands_of_Jellyfish_Invading_Hawaii</a> (A Hawaiian tourism site)<a class="user" href="http://digg.com/environment/147_Tips_to_Live_Healthier_Happier_and_Greener">http://digg.com/environment/147_Tips_to_Live_Healthier_Happier_and_Greener</a> (A credit card site)<a class="user" href="http://digg.com/hardware/10_Ways_to_Recycle_Your_Old_Computer">http://digg.com/hardware/10_Ways_to_Recycle_Your_Old_Computer</a> (A 100% Spam site)Also note how many times he submitted mashable.com or readwriteweb.comI can provide more proof, but by doing that I will be reveling my real identity too and that's something you don't want to do with these dangerous SEO's. Your account is enough proof <a class="user" href="http://digg.com/users/webtickle/news/submitted">http://digg.com/users/webtickle/news/submitted</a>Yes Neil Patel, (webtickle) I know everything because I was and still am in your circle of friends. The time has come to stop you and your SEO friends from gaming digg and accusing it of censorship when sites that paid you to submit their stories don't make it to the digg home page.The truth will always prevail. You know what you're doing but will deny it. Your credibility is on the line, tread lightly.
amylopanMay 20, 2007
Yes, that would be enough for an entirely new post. :)