If receiving investment information via blog is a problem for you, maybe you shouldn't be inventing in google. As Warren Buffett says: invest in what you know.
Warren Buffet is a full time investor, so that's a viable strategy for him. For most people "invest in what you know" is equivalent to "invest in the industry you work in" which is a bad strategy. Much better is to invest in low-cost index funds, a strategy that could be summed up as "don't know what you're investing in."
"However, some worry that this trend may harm individual and less-sophisticated investors who cannot access the blogs and websites as quickly as professionals. Others worry that not everyone will get the information."
Putting the stuff on a public website with a simple url makes it HARDER for non-professionals to access? Someone clue me in to their reasoning as to why.
+1. Most of them have a rather hazy idea of what they are doing and are stuck in the last century technology-wise. Example: at least one wire releases time-critical information in HTML with multimegabyte (yes, megabyte) stylesheets which are delivered inline. And they won't change the format.
TABLE.t {
BORDER-RIGHT: medium none; BORDER-TOP: medium none; MARGIN-LEFT: -5.4pt; BORDER-LEFT: medium none; BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse
}
It sure was a great way to attact investitors to Google's site. More of a way to market a google product (http://investor.google.com/), than anything else. Conventional media may not like it, but that is understandable, as the product marketed by google competes with such conventional media (without charging for it).
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 67.9 ms ] threadWish i had the power to do this to my ISP.
Newspapers afraid of change, read all about it.
Putting the stuff on a public website with a simple url makes it HARDER for non-professionals to access? Someone clue me in to their reasoning as to why.
There is still the same number of things for them to track. They just have to track them in a different place.
I think it would be fun to see the SEC require a specific URL for the location of investment information. Or create a simple API to be followed.
Yes, a hyperlink is a "brief obstacle". You'd have thought financial analysts would have learned how to use a computer by 2010.
They would have no way of knowing that if they just send it out as an press release.
.g { MARGIN: 72pt 90pt; size: 595.3pt 841.9pt }
P.a { FONT-SIZE: 10pt; MARGIN: 0cm 0cm 0pt; FONT-FAMILY: "Arial","sans-serif"; LETTER-SPACING: 0.5pt }
TABLE.t { BORDER-RIGHT: medium none; BORDER-TOP: medium none; MARGIN-LEFT: -5.4pt; BORDER-LEFT: medium none; BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse }
... oodles of it.