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But I’m not complaining. Instead, here and completely gratis, is an idea that could work for you. It could substantially reduce time-to-listing in DMOZ and perhaps make you moderately rich.
It's that you set up a commercial ancillary site to DMOZ. Let's call it (apologies if someone has this domain already -- it's just an example) not-in-dmoz.com.
You add sites to not-in-dmoz.com if:
Now DMOZ editors are not stupid. They'll scour anywhere on the web for good leads to new sites that deserve listings. (That's why most of them don't spend much time in the submitted-sites pool. It's so much sewage).
So, once not-in-dmoz.com has a reputation for listing quality sites, (with great guideline-compliant descriptions, all-but-guaranteed not to be mirrors, affiliates, hijacks, or other spammy sites, etc), editors will visit not-in-dmoz.com regularly and mine it for sites.
Soon, very soon, you will be able to offer statistics showing that once a site is listed in not-in-dmoz.com it takes only x days to get into DMOZ. Provided x is low enough (and it will be) more and more people will use your service. You will be a runaway success.
Of course, this all depends on your impeccable reputation for listing sites that are irresistible to DMOZ. This means you will need to be absolutely ruthless in listing only sites that can be listed there. As soon as you let your standards drop, or the spammers give you the run-around, the word will go around the DMOZ community that your site is not worth a visit, and not-in-dmoz.com will become a true statement.
If you are charging people a non-refundable fee (or a fee that is only partially refundable if their site is not listable on not-in-dmoz.com, or doesn't get a DMOZ listing after X+n days) you will be making money hand-over-fist as spammers and wannabes invest money with you first.
I could go on. There are a dozen other ways to help improve DMOZ while making money on ancillary services such as this. All it'll take is for someone to try them out rather than wanting volunteers to monetize the current operation. That someone could be you. Just go for it.
It can only fail if the vast majority of sites not currently listed in DMOZ are not eligible for listing -- and that's not a claim supported by any of the complainants in this forum.
How you'd deal with whiny submitters who had paid you a lot of money to list a piece-of-cr*p affiliate site that you knew would be a detriment to your auxiliary directory, though, would be a logistical nightmare. I wouldn't envy anybody that job. There's enough sense of entitlement over the free listings; I think some of these people would be setting off bombs if they'd paid any MONEY for a rejection.
I agree with flicker - very difficult to police it, and refuse the cash for rubbish sites.
Dear advertiser,
Thank you for listing with not-in-dmoz.com! Your payment has been received, your site has been reviewed, accepted , and has been listed in the following category:
Home > Scams > Website Traffic Generators
etc.
Easy. But I'm not about to write someone a whole business plan, so I'll keep the other half-dozen ideas to myself for now.
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Disclaimer: This post constitutes an unofficial, personal opinion not necessarily shared by other ODP editors, the university, or my cats.
Thanks for asking!
But this ---
>>Congratulations! Your site is listable. But why wait passively until a DMOZ editor stumbles across it? We have an (opt-in of course) email list of DMOZ editors, one of which edits your category. For USDxx we'll email them a heads-up.
Uh...yeah...that would go over well. Frankly I'd be suspicious of any editor who would opt to be on a mailing list that was dedicated to making someone else money off the ODP.
>> I've had enough bright ideas in one lifetime to be comfortably retired in my mid-40
Looking at your current presentation about not-in-dmoz.com, I have no doubts :)
keeper:
>> Would not-in-dmoz.com get a listing in dmoz.org though?
I couldn't say yes without looking at the site first, but... why not?
Such a site would present content organized in a unique way, described with unique (human editors?) descriptions, and organized in categories. We mine linklists and don't add them if they just... list links, but we do add directories to the ODP when they have relevant and unique content.
victor and motsa
>> >> Congratulations! Your site is listable. But why wait passively ... We have an (opt-in of course) ... For USDxx we'll email them a heads-up.
>> Frankly I'd be suspicious of any editor who would opt to be on a mailing list that was dedicated to making someone else money off the ODP.
I agree. What about
"Congratulations! Your site is listable. But why wait passively until a DMOZ editor stumbles across it? For USDxx we'll submit a professional site submission status request over at the ODP Public Forum, and guidelines-compliant follow ups until your site gets listed" (partially refundable fee if it doesn't get listed in, say, 6 months?)