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balthazarusfollowshare
2-9-2009 4:14 AM
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“The reason why I think wikis work is it’s a lot easier for me to undo something you did than for you to do it,” Mr. Conrad said. And if someone lies about a company, they are subject to prosecution for securities fraud.

Joseph A. Grundfest, a former member of the Securities and Exchange Commission who teaches at Stanford, sees some benefits to the wiki model. “We need more people to take responsibility for their own investment decisions, and the easier you make it for people to get good information at low cost, the better off the world will be,” he said. However,

“People have to understand that whenever you use a wiki, you get what you pay for.”
Sounds interesting.
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2-9-2009 11:12 AM
gemfemfox
They still base their picks on defunct investment "truths".

If you all knew how huge the next 4 bubbles were, you were yank your money and run, run, run.

Wish I could convince my husband but I can't. So the little protection I had for my daughter is dwindling away. Won't be much longer and it will be completely wiped out thanks to "investment cycles".

This could have been great 5 years ago, regretfully, now it will be next to worthless as the bubbles pop and devastation floods the world.
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