tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10485390.post7907904515509009977..comments2024-03-01T03:17:37.454-05:00Comments on Dalai's PACS Blog: Zurker.comDalaihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17775491711029994911noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10485390.post-66421147674924179812013-11-22T14:17:50.681-05:002013-11-22T14:17:50.681-05:00There are so many new social sites that are becomi...There are so many new social sites that are becoming social networking trends, Zurker is a great idea, but I am still not convince how legit is it. There is another evolving site http://www.chatching.com similar to zurker users can become co-owners. I am leaning more towards ChatChing, beign the fact that it has registered with US SEC to distribute stock to its members free of cost. No need to buy vshares, you use the site earn points that convert into stock ownership. It will be interesting to see how each evolve, for now my vote is on ChatChing. <br /><br />Esined729https://www.blogger.com/profile/01643139653724095715noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10485390.post-20011035715124526812012-08-07T07:29:44.645-04:002012-08-07T07:29:44.645-04:00Zurker is an interesting concept. As a social med...Zurker is an interesting concept. As a social media site, it needs to mature quite a bit (which should be no surprise to the creator or to the community). I find it unfortunate that the early adopters seem to be MLM pushers, and that may deter the general public from grasping onto Zurker. <br /><br />The idea of vShares is not properly explained throughout the Zurker site, to the point that it is misleading. There are actually 9 separate regional Zurker entities (US, UK, India, Philippines, NZ, Canada, Australia, Europe, worldwide). Each of these entities is divided into 1M vShares. The success of each regional Zurker is independent of the others, and the Zurker members/owners only have a stake in their "local" Zurker (i.e. as a Canadian, even if I *wanted* to throw real cash for vShares in Zurker US or ZurkerIndia, I cannot). Anyway, all of this to say that a vShare is not *really* one one millionth of the whole pie, it is one one millionth of one of nine pies. You can take a look at the stats (http://www.zurker.com/z.r?a=stats) and their books (http://www.zurker.com/z.r?a=books) to see how big each pie is.Jason Bhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10993483870576791775noreply@blogger.com