Those of you who participate on the WOT forum and blog know that we enjoy providing a place where people can share their knowledge and experiences regarding websites. As our community is growing, we want to develop WOT further by letting you communicate easily with other users and share interesting and fun stuff with them.
But before our development team starts its work we would like to hear your ideas: what social activities would you like to have? What information would you like to share with and see about other members? If you have your own website, would you like to have widgets, badges and banners from WOT? We just added a list of Top 20,000 Websites by Popularity – what else would you like to see from our database? What about the user levels and rewards?
Here are some things we have been thinking about:
Please share your ideas on the forum and participate in building Web of Trust!
Listen to a podcast conversation between our CEO, Esa, and Ville Kolehmainen, Chief Creative Officer of Design Agency FUSION.
Communication is important to us at Web of Trust. After all, we aren't just a website reputation rating service, but a community working together to make the web a safer place. Whether we're making a comment on a site's scorecard or participating on the forum or blog, talking to one another is what makes people-driven security work.
Today we debut our newsletter, Inside MyWOT. Please take a few minutes to look it over, and let me know what you think. Inside MyWOT is about our community, so I invite you to submit your stories and share your Web of Trust experiences. Write me at deborah@mywot.com.
Get Inside MyWOT now
Bill Mullins is an advocate of WOT's people-driven security (in fact, he’s the one who coined the phrase!), and in his latest blog post on TechThoughts he emphasizes the importance of WOT members' participation. He says, “We are all responsible for each other’s security on the Internet.” Read his blog here Please help us spread the word about WOT to others by voting for Bill's review on digg and bookmarking it on the sites below.
In an effort to educate parents and teachers about the usefulness of WOT in helping keep kids safe on the Internet, I participated in my first podcast recently. 8falcons, a site specializing in online safety education for children asked me for an interview, so I dusted off my voice and squeaked an enthusiastic, "Yes!"
Hear the result, and pass it on to any teachers or parents you know who could benefit from having WOT as part of their Internet security.
Listen to the podcast (8.23 minutes)