Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ways of Making Money


Social games are the rage these days, but making money from them isn’t easy. Gamers play these titles for free, but Adknowledge is figuring out how game publishers can wind up making money from 100 percent of the players.


Adknowledge’s Burlingame, Calif.-based Super Rewards subsidiary is launching a three-part system for making money from virtual currency in games. That could help boost the engagement of players in social games and help raise the revenue generated from each user, said Adknowledge chief executive Scott Lynn. Adknowledge can offer this money-making system as a one-stop shop for publishers and game advertisers.


The three elements include an in-game overlay, offer banners, and a new offer wall for online game publishers. Adknowledge claims the new platform improves the experience for users and increases the number of paying users in a game. Adknowledge is one of a number of companies that give users the option of accepting special offers in lieu of payment for an online game. You can accept an offer such as signing up for a Netflix subscription in return for virtual currency in a game.


But results show that roughly 75 percent of players do not use offers. Super Rewards can target those missing the offers with an in-game overlay, which brings a single, high-value offer to users within a game. The overlay shows up at strategic moments in a game, such as after the initial load. The offers can include promotional language such as “Get More Coins.”


The offer banner uses the space around the main game landscape, presenting a mini version of an offer wall during game play. Users can pay for virtual items at the moment with direct payment methods.


Publishers using the three-part system include The Broth, whose Facebook game Barn Buddy saw its revenue increase 25 percent after using the new system for just five days, said Broth chief executive Markus Weichselbaum. Other publishers have seen a 45 percent increase in the number of new paying users. Adknowledge said developers have seen a 40-percent increase in the number of first-time payers. Super Rewards’ rivals include TrialPay and Offerpal.


Adknowledge has more than 300 employees and $300 million in revenue, making it the largest privately owned internet advertising network. It was founded in 2004 and has grown through acquisitions. The company has raised $48 million in funding from Technology Crossover Ventures.


Next Story: Game media firm IGN Entertainment to give free office space to indie game startups Previous Story: DEMO: VentureBeat’s Matt Marshall touts tech and farming trends (video)



It seems that one of Google’s latest doodles, a homage to the 25th anniversary of the discovery of Buckyballs was, as we suspected, too clever by half. Two, presumably, unintentional consequences have emerged: costing Google’s users money, while making a heck of a lot of cash for the maker of the Buckyballs desktoy overnight.


The way the doodle itself had been designed put a very heavy load on users’ computers, increasing power consumption at a cost to those users, as well as causing many a browser crash. That’s kind of clumsy and, arguably, irresponsible when you consider how many people have Google as their browser’s default start page.


But more bizarrely was another side effect, which surely Google must have anticipated: sending a massive amount of traffic to GetBuckyballs.com, a site that sells the Buckyballs desktoy, described as “a set of building spheres containing 216 powerful Rare Earth magnets that can be shaped, molded, torn apart and snapped together in unlimited ways.”


That’s because clicking on Google’s doodle brought up search results for “Buckyballs”, and GetBuckyballs.com was one of the top results, sending over 2,000,000+ unique visitors to the site and generating 10,000 unit sales in a single day. Which translates to more than $250,000 in revenue, at least according to the announcement the online retailer distributed today.


That’s one way of making your search engine positioning efforts pay off – but it’s certainly a rare occasion to see Google lending such a big virtual hand.



Michelle Malkin » Good <b>News</b>: Dukakis Advising Democrats

Good News: Dukakis Advising Democrats. ... New Scapegoat for a Lousy Economy: Fox News is Hogging All the Success. September 28, 2010 04:34 PM by Doug Powers. 53 Comments | 2 Trackbacks ...

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Read our 3DS news of Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month.


bench craft company rip off
bench craft company rip off

I realise now the way to make money is to own a ferris wheel, because stupid gullible parents will indulge their children and pay $6 per ticket for a seven-minute ride. And to be honest, the ride is only worth its value for the seven-minutes of solitude f by lizcave


Michelle Malkin » Good <b>News</b>: Dukakis Advising Democrats

Good News: Dukakis Advising Democrats. ... New Scapegoat for a Lousy Economy: Fox News is Hogging All the Success. September 28, 2010 04:34 PM by Doug Powers. 53 Comments | 2 Trackbacks ...

<b>News</b> Roundup: Gordon Ramsay Responds to Chef&#39;s Suicide, Brad <b>...</b>

Gordon Ramsay has opened up about the death of 'Kitchen Nightmares' contestant Joseph Cerniglia. According to Entertainment Weekly, Ramsay expressed.

Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month 3DS <b>News</b> - Page 1 <b>...</b>

Read our 3DS news of Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month.


benchcraft company scam bench craft company rip off

Social games are the rage these days, but making money from them isn’t easy. Gamers play these titles for free, but Adknowledge is figuring out how game publishers can wind up making money from 100 percent of the players.


Adknowledge’s Burlingame, Calif.-based Super Rewards subsidiary is launching a three-part system for making money from virtual currency in games. That could help boost the engagement of players in social games and help raise the revenue generated from each user, said Adknowledge chief executive Scott Lynn. Adknowledge can offer this money-making system as a one-stop shop for publishers and game advertisers.


The three elements include an in-game overlay, offer banners, and a new offer wall for online game publishers. Adknowledge claims the new platform improves the experience for users and increases the number of paying users in a game. Adknowledge is one of a number of companies that give users the option of accepting special offers in lieu of payment for an online game. You can accept an offer such as signing up for a Netflix subscription in return for virtual currency in a game.


But results show that roughly 75 percent of players do not use offers. Super Rewards can target those missing the offers with an in-game overlay, which brings a single, high-value offer to users within a game. The overlay shows up at strategic moments in a game, such as after the initial load. The offers can include promotional language such as “Get More Coins.”


The offer banner uses the space around the main game landscape, presenting a mini version of an offer wall during game play. Users can pay for virtual items at the moment with direct payment methods.


Publishers using the three-part system include The Broth, whose Facebook game Barn Buddy saw its revenue increase 25 percent after using the new system for just five days, said Broth chief executive Markus Weichselbaum. Other publishers have seen a 45 percent increase in the number of new paying users. Adknowledge said developers have seen a 40-percent increase in the number of first-time payers. Super Rewards’ rivals include TrialPay and Offerpal.


Adknowledge has more than 300 employees and $300 million in revenue, making it the largest privately owned internet advertising network. It was founded in 2004 and has grown through acquisitions. The company has raised $48 million in funding from Technology Crossover Ventures.


Next Story: Game media firm IGN Entertainment to give free office space to indie game startups Previous Story: DEMO: VentureBeat’s Matt Marshall touts tech and farming trends (video)



It seems that one of Google’s latest doodles, a homage to the 25th anniversary of the discovery of Buckyballs was, as we suspected, too clever by half. Two, presumably, unintentional consequences have emerged: costing Google’s users money, while making a heck of a lot of cash for the maker of the Buckyballs desktoy overnight.


The way the doodle itself had been designed put a very heavy load on users’ computers, increasing power consumption at a cost to those users, as well as causing many a browser crash. That’s kind of clumsy and, arguably, irresponsible when you consider how many people have Google as their browser’s default start page.


But more bizarrely was another side effect, which surely Google must have anticipated: sending a massive amount of traffic to GetBuckyballs.com, a site that sells the Buckyballs desktoy, described as “a set of building spheres containing 216 powerful Rare Earth magnets that can be shaped, molded, torn apart and snapped together in unlimited ways.”


That’s because clicking on Google’s doodle brought up search results for “Buckyballs”, and GetBuckyballs.com was one of the top results, sending over 2,000,000+ unique visitors to the site and generating 10,000 unit sales in a single day. Which translates to more than $250,000 in revenue, at least according to the announcement the online retailer distributed today.


That’s one way of making your search engine positioning efforts pay off – but it’s certainly a rare occasion to see Google lending such a big virtual hand.



benchcraft company scam

Michelle Malkin » Good <b>News</b>: Dukakis Advising Democrats

Good News: Dukakis Advising Democrats. ... New Scapegoat for a Lousy Economy: Fox News is Hogging All the Success. September 28, 2010 04:34 PM by Doug Powers. 53 Comments | 2 Trackbacks ...

<b>News</b> Roundup: Gordon Ramsay Responds to Chef&#39;s Suicide, Brad <b>...</b>

Gordon Ramsay has opened up about the death of 'Kitchen Nightmares' contestant Joseph Cerniglia. According to Entertainment Weekly, Ramsay expressed.

Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month 3DS <b>News</b> - Page 1 <b>...</b>

Read our 3DS news of Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month.


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Michelle Malkin » Good <b>News</b>: Dukakis Advising Democrats

Good News: Dukakis Advising Democrats. ... New Scapegoat for a Lousy Economy: Fox News is Hogging All the Success. September 28, 2010 04:34 PM by Doug Powers. 53 Comments | 2 Trackbacks ...

<b>News</b> Roundup: Gordon Ramsay Responds to Chef&#39;s Suicide, Brad <b>...</b>

Gordon Ramsay has opened up about the death of 'Kitchen Nightmares' contestant Joseph Cerniglia. According to Entertainment Weekly, Ramsay expressed.

Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month 3DS <b>News</b> - Page 1 <b>...</b>

Read our 3DS news of Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month.


benchcraft company scam bench craft company rip off

Michelle Malkin » Good <b>News</b>: Dukakis Advising Democrats

Good News: Dukakis Advising Democrats. ... New Scapegoat for a Lousy Economy: Fox News is Hogging All the Success. September 28, 2010 04:34 PM by Doug Powers. 53 Comments | 2 Trackbacks ...

<b>News</b> Roundup: Gordon Ramsay Responds to Chef&#39;s Suicide, Brad <b>...</b>

Gordon Ramsay has opened up about the death of 'Kitchen Nightmares' contestant Joseph Cerniglia. According to Entertainment Weekly, Ramsay expressed.

Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month 3DS <b>News</b> - Page 1 <b>...</b>

Read our 3DS news of Nintendo: 4m 3DS sales in first month.


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Friday, September 24, 2010

personal finance planning




Synium Software has released an update to iFinance Mobile adding native iPad support and several additional new features. iFinance Mobile is a personal finance application for iOS devices that allows users to record transactions and expenses on the go and optionally sync that data with iFinance for the Mac for expanded financial review and planning. iFinance Mobile 2.0 is now a universal app providing native support for the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad and adds a new Account History chart, CSV export of transaction data via e-mail and an improved, redesigned user interface for both the iPhone and iPad. The update also provides several other smaller enhancements such as a graphical calendar view, automatic BIC and IBAN validation, transaction sorting by date and localization in Czech, Polish, French and Russian. iFinance Mobile 2.0 is available from the App Store for $2 and is a free update for users of any prior version.








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Early Critics Weigh in on Benu : Good <b>News</b>/Bad <b>News</b> : Eater SF

After slaving away in the internationally acclaimed French Laundry kitchen with one Thomas Kellar for years, Corey Lee is on his own now at Benu. If you've never heard of...

Apple&#39;s MobileMe <b>News</b> details how iWork for iPad works with iDisk

The details were posted on MobileMe News, the blog of the MobileMe team. Windows users can point a browser to me.com/idisk and upload existing Microsoft Office documents. Once the documents are in the cloud, they can be opened from the ...

Can &#39;Fox <b>News</b> North&#39; win its next battle? - Canada - Macleans.ca

Sun TV's Canadian-content promise might be its best selling feature.


Early Critics Weigh in on Benu : Good <b>News</b>/Bad <b>News</b> : Eater SF

After slaving away in the internationally acclaimed French Laundry kitchen with one Thomas Kellar for years, Corey Lee is on his own now at Benu. If you've never heard of...

Apple&#39;s MobileMe <b>News</b> details how iWork for iPad works with iDisk

The details were posted on MobileMe News, the blog of the MobileMe team. Windows users can point a browser to me.com/idisk and upload existing Microsoft Office documents. Once the documents are in the cloud, they can be opened from the ...

Can &#39;Fox <b>News</b> North&#39; win its next battle? - Canada - Macleans.ca

Sun TV's Canadian-content promise might be its best selling feature.


big white booty

Early Critics Weigh in on Benu : Good <b>News</b>/Bad <b>News</b> : Eater SF

After slaving away in the internationally acclaimed French Laundry kitchen with one Thomas Kellar for years, Corey Lee is on his own now at Benu. If you've never heard of...

Apple&#39;s MobileMe <b>News</b> details how iWork for iPad works with iDisk

The details were posted on MobileMe News, the blog of the MobileMe team. Windows users can point a browser to me.com/idisk and upload existing Microsoft Office documents. Once the documents are in the cloud, they can be opened from the ...

Can &#39;Fox <b>News</b> North&#39; win its next battle? - Canada - Macleans.ca

Sun TV's Canadian-content promise might be its best selling feature.



 by Julia Delligatti







 by Julia Delligatti






























how to manage personal finances


From Hotline (HT: Mataconis):


O'Donnell, a perennial conservative candidate in Delaware, is challenging moderate Rep. Mike Castle (R), the clear favorite of the GOP establishment. But she has come under fire recently for her personal financial problems. Reports have surfaced that she owed $10K in back taxes, defaulted on her mortgage and holds outstanding campaign debt.


Levi Russell, a spokesman for the group, told Hotline On Call that the group was not aware of O'Donnell's personal financial problems before it endorsed her.


"We don't know the exact situation," he said.


When asked if the group discussed the issues with O'Donnell, Russell responded: "No we haven't. We don't really have any contact with the campaign or the candidate."


We have blogged before reasons why we support Mike Castle over O'Donnell. But this report raises even more questions, such as:



  1. If the Tea Party really stands for fiscal conservatism, why would they endorse somebody who can't even manage her personal finances?

  2. Does it give you confidence in the Tea Party that they go around endorsing people without having any contact with the candidate? How do they know that this female version of Harold Stassen is really worthy of such an endorsement?

  3. Christine O'Donnell has run for office 4 times. Her sole victory was an uncontested Republican primary.

  4. In 2008, O'Donnell lost the Delaware senate race to Joe Biden by 65-35. She later falsely claimed to have won two counties in that race. Biden's percentage of the vote in 2008 was the largest of any of his senatorial campaigns.

  5. In 2008, one of the great Democratic landslides, Mike Castle beat his Democratic challenger for Delaware's sole Congressional seat by 23 points. Castle has won 13 consecutive state-wide races as a candidate either for Governor or Congressman. He's way ahead of the Democrat in the polls while O'Donnell trails the Democrat by 10 points.


As a student of Delaware corporate governance, I am firmly convinced that Delaware needs quality representation in Congress if it is to fend off the creeping federalization of corporate law. As a big tent Republican, I'm inclined to support smart, electable, centrists like Mike Castle over someone like O'Donnell. The perfect must not be allowed to become the enemy of the good. Especially when the supposed perfect candidate is pretty seriously flawed and probably unelectable.


This post is from staff writer Sierra Black. Sierra writes about frugality, sustainable living, and getting her kids to eat kale at Childwild.com. This post is part of Book Week at Get Rich Slowly.


Since my twin victories of paying off our last credit card and funding a summer of travel, my husband has begun to show interest in personal finance.


It’s not that he wasn’t supportive of my efforts before — he just preferred to support them from a safe, ignorant distance. A distance from which I handed him an envelope of cash each week to do the grocery shopping, he didn’t ask too many questions, and somehow we were climbing out of debt. He was more than happy to adopt any frugal-living strategy I suggested, as long as he didn’t have to think about the Big Picture.


That system worked, but I longed for more active participation from him. Not only because I wanted us to share equally in the journey toward financial freedom — I do want that — but also for a selfish reason. I wanted him to participate because he’s better at this stuff than I am. He’s a whiz at spreadsheets. The man has a Ph.d in Physical Chemistry. You don’t get one of those without doing a few math problems.


Lately, I’ve been getting my wish. My husband has been talking with a financial advisor at the university he works for, and having clear, honest conversations with me about our money.


This seemed like the perfect time for me to read Mary Hunt’s How to Debt-Proof Your Marriage.


Relationship first

Hunt’s book covers the basics of personal finance and debt destruction, with a special focus on doing it as a couple. Before she even begins talking about financial management, Hunt talks about strengthening the foundations of your marriage. You can’t have financial harmony without emotional intimacy, she says.


I couldn’t agree more. It’s clear in my own marriage that spending time relaxing together on vacation helped my husband and me both chill out and have better conversations during our family finance meetings too.


Hunt and I part ways in the chapters about how to achieve that emotional intimacy, though. She bases her prescription for marital bliss on traditional gender roles. She includes chapters for each sex on how to make deposits in the other’s Love Bank — a metaphorical bank of goodwill made of small, loving gestures.


The Love Bank is an adorable idea, one I’m tempted to put into practice here in my own home. I’m pretty sure I won’t be making my deposits to my husband’s Love Bank by biting my tongue when I disagree with him, though. Likewise, I don’t expect him to express his love for me by bringing me flowers and handling all the tough decisions for me like the natural leader of our family should.


Hunt is a generation (or two) older than I am, and what works for her marriage is so foreign to my young, feminist mind that it was actually a little hard to read. But leaving aside the details of how you get to an intimate marriage, though, she and I agree wholeheartedly that it’s important to get your emotional needs met before you can effectively work together with your spouse to manage your finances.


Money second

The personal-finance half of the book will be familiar to most GRS readers. Hunt advocates an approach similar to Your Money or Your Life and Dave Ramsey’s Total Money Makeover, one that begins with calculating your net worth and tracking your expenses. From there, she covers the basics of setting up an emergency fund, creating a spending plan, and starting a debt snowball (though she uses different terms for these steps).


Like her ideal of a healthy relationship, Hunt’s financial advice seems a little dated in places. A lot of it has to do with how to organize your three-ring binders, or how to painstakingly accomplish by-hand calculations that Mint can do for you in a few minutes. If you’re a devotee of the pen-and-paper approach, though, her chapters on how to track and plan your spending are rock solid and detailed enough to easily follow.


The one thing in this book that made me want to put it down, run to my office, and implement it on the spot was, in fact, her filing system. Hunt takes a few pages to go over exactly what personal records you should be keeping, and outlines an elegant effective way to organize them. I spent an hour tearing apart my filing cabinet yesterday as soon as I read those pages. I may not want my marriage to look much like hers, but I’m delighted to have made over my filing cabinet in Mary Hunt’s image.


Different views

There are a few areas where Mary’s financial advice deviates from the usual Get Rich Slowly formula. One is the matter of the debt snowball. She encourages readers to start saving 10% of their income towards an emergency fund immediately, while still paying the minimums on their credit cards. Only after saving up a fully funded six-month emergency fund would Hunt advise you to roll those savings into your credit card payments.


Given the relative interest rates on credit cards and savings accounts, this approach will almost certainly cost you money. If it works for you psychologically, though, by all means pursue it. No matter what order you do them in, the key steps of tracking your spending, creating an emergency fund, and snowballing your debt payments will lead you to financial security.


Another place where she breaks with conventional wisdom is in her savings and spending ratios. GRS readers are familiar with the Balanced Money Formula that encourages us to use 50% of our money for living expenses, 30% for fun and 20% for savings. Hunt advises 10% for giving, 10% for saving and 80% for spending.


The order of those percentages is vital to her. A devout Christian, Hunt feels that all the money that comes into your life is a blessing from God, and promptly giving 10% of it back to God shows you can be trusted with this blessing, and more of it will come your way.


I’m not a Christian, but I admire Mary’s faith and devotion to charitable giving. It’s a goal of mine to give 10% of my income. I’ve written about that here before, and readers made a persuasive case for waiting until my debts were paid before giving so much away. For now, I give a modest amount and look forward to giving more in the future.


I think that for Hunt, the psychological benefits of giving 10% and saving 10% before you make any spending decisions at all outweigh the financial benefits of paying off your debts as fast as possible and then beginning to accumulate and donate wealth.


It’s an interesting approach, and one that might work for a lot of people. Particularly if you’re a devoted Christian and looking for a personal-finance book that reflects your values, you’ll find a lot of good in How to Debt-Proof Your Marriage. If you’re looking for a book that’s totally focused on financial savvy and relationship skills, though, this might not be your best bet.











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Bad <b>news</b> for green technology | Watts Up With That?

Super magnet production has also been shipped over to China http://www.chinamagnet.in/i-News-229212/The-development-and-applications-of-Rare-Earth-Permanent-Magnetic-Materials-244616.html. Over the last 10 to 20 years companies have ...

Diane Sawyer: ABC World <b>News</b> Goes Home: Looking for What Works in <b>...</b>

We at ABC's World News are heading out to search for innovative ideas that are helping turn the economy around. Real change is often born out of a simple act. And one ripple can lead to a powerful transformation.

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Bad <b>news</b> for green technology | Watts Up With That?

Super magnet production has also been shipped over to China http://www.chinamagnet.in/i-News-229212/The-development-and-applications-of-Rare-Earth-Permanent-Magnetic-Materials-244616.html. Over the last 10 to 20 years companies have ...

Diane Sawyer: ABC World <b>News</b> Goes Home: Looking for What Works in <b>...</b>

We at ABC's World News are heading out to search for innovative ideas that are helping turn the economy around. Real change is often born out of a simple act. And one ripple can lead to a powerful transformation.

Lindsay Lohan Photos &amp; Pics | BREAKING <b>NEWS</b> - Lindsay Lohan Gets <b>...</b>

Lindsay Lohan has just been sentenced to 30 days in jail for violating her probation after testing positive for cocaine. Judge Fox has denied Lindsay bail and has sent her straight to jail until October 22nd. But due to the overcrowding ...


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Bad <b>news</b> for green technology | Watts Up With That?

Super magnet production has also been shipped over to China http://www.chinamagnet.in/i-News-229212/The-development-and-applications-of-Rare-Earth-Permanent-Magnetic-Materials-244616.html. Over the last 10 to 20 years companies have ...

Diane Sawyer: ABC World <b>News</b> Goes Home: Looking for What Works in <b>...</b>

We at ABC's World News are heading out to search for innovative ideas that are helping turn the economy around. Real change is often born out of a simple act. And one ripple can lead to a powerful transformation.

Lindsay Lohan Photos &amp; Pics | BREAKING <b>NEWS</b> - Lindsay Lohan Gets <b>...</b>

Lindsay Lohan has just been sentenced to 30 days in jail for violating her probation after testing positive for cocaine. Judge Fox has denied Lindsay bail and has sent her straight to jail until October 22nd. But due to the overcrowding ...



MABUHAY ALLIANCE HOST THE 6TH ANNUAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE by mabuhayalliance







MABUHAY ALLIANCE HOST THE 6TH ANNUAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE by mabuhayalliance






























Thursday, September 23, 2010

bank foreclosure





42 Responses to “Man without Mortgage Loses Home in Foreclosure”







  1. Barry Ritholtz Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 7:24 am

    Un-Fucking-Believable . . .








  2. Dennis Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 7:36 am

    That is insane!








  3. stonedwino Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 8:22 am

    Really? Wow….B of A….what a clusterfuck…








  4. Robespierre Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 8:38 am

    And the music will not stop until someone goes to jail or is criminally charged in a very public way. Obama softness with the bankers has only embolden them. As they say “beatings will continue until moral improves”. Oh yes the foreclosed parties should just “suck it up and cope” after all these bankers are just doing God’s work








  5. dead hobo Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 8:59 am

    This is too high of a level view to be so negative. Yes, there was a screw up but nobody was tossed out and BoA says they will fix it. Except for a little paperwork, it doesn’t sound like anything else was messed up. Realistically, where are the damages assuming BoA puts everything back as it was and also assuming this high level view is the whole story? Not every screw up should be a profit opportunity if you know a lawyer.


    The bigger question is, “How did this happen?” Being my normal pessimistic self, I don’t think anyone will get into trouble for it because such things don’t happen anymore. Nor will anyone look into it.








  6. phb Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 9:08 am

    How, pray-tell, is the judge in this case not partially responsible? BOA is not solely responsible for this level of incompetence, I mean they were just trying to protect their interest (albeit in error). All involved other than the victim, need to pay for this fiasco. IMHO of course.








  7. dead hobo Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 9:39 am

    BR, calm down. Yes, these poor people got screwed over but they will be made whole and nobody will get into trouble for it.


    Here’s something to cheer about. The labor news was quite dismal.


    Assuming the past can be used to predict the future, the S&P should go for the moon today and hit a new high. For the past year, and especially over the past few weeks, virtually all bad economic news is accompanied by a strong rise in the markets.


    Maybe this is some of the change you can believe in. Before this, bad news was usually accompanied by market declines until good news appeared. Today, all news makes the markets rise.


    Now that’s fucking unbelievable.








  8. whatever Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 9:44 am

    But..but, dont we want protection for our corporations? Otherwise, they wont invest and wont create jobs.

    We should protect our corporations against any lawsuits. At the minimum, any ruling against them will be capped at $50.

    Thats how we create jobs in America.








  9. tspck Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 9:53 am

    . . . so a couple of flunkies at ACORN cooperate in a prostitution scheme and there is literally an act of congress to disembowel the organization . . . but here when the action was conducted in a court of law, with hot and cold running lawyers, it’s “mistake may happen” and “don’t overreact”. How come?








  10. constantnormal Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 9:54 am

    @dead hobo — I think you’re missing the point here. MERS and a general laxity of documentation and procedure throughout the real estate industry has destroyed the chain of ownership, to the point that even people who own their homes outright may have have to defend their claims of ownership, and without the benefit of a strong chain of ownership documentation to support them. This is not merely an extreme oddity, but is a proof-by-example of this situation.


    The banks are not properly motivated, and tend to treat this as “oops, our bad”. It really doesn’t matter whether or not they were physically evicted — the point of the matter is that they were LEGALLY evicted, until legal intervention was required to restore what was rightly theirs. And this can happen to anyone.


    And even if the victims had been evicted and had to invest huge sums of time and money to correct the situation, nobody would get into trouble. Lehman, AIG, and a host of other ugly messes is proof enough of that.








  11. Calvin Jones and the 13th Apostle Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 9:56 am

    Dead Hobo:

    Don’t you understand what’s going on re: the markets?








  12. Arequipa01 Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:08 am

    “Bank of America has acknowledged the error and will correct it at its own expense, said spokeswoman Jumana Bauwens.”


    It is not ‘an error’. It is part and parcel of an ongoing criminal conspiracy. The significant problem here is the likelihood that the Banks will defang the Judiciary or as they say en el Perú, aquí no pasa na aaa…


    There is a lot out there on this issue. A good place to start is the Landmark case.


    http://loanworkout.org/2009/09/landmark-v-kesler-mers-kansas/








  13. dead hobo Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:10 am

    constantnormal Says:

    September 23rd, 2010 at 9:54 am


    @dead hobo — I think you’re missing the point here. MERS and a general laxity of documentation and procedure throughout the real estate industry has destroyed the chain of ownership, to the point that even people who own their homes outright may have have to defend their claims of ownership, and without the benefit of a strong chain of ownership documentation to support them.


    reply:

    ———-

    We just use the county recorder here to record ownership and security interests. Plus title insurance. Most jurisdictions do things in a similar way, I assume. If a bank stole my paid for house, I would first try to turn in into a winning lottery ticket, but would probably be disappointed and maybe get a free toaster as a premium after they fixed the problem.


    Agreed the foreclosure system is a mess, but the mess is cohesive and likely to remain a mess no matter who complains about it. I’m just adjusting to reality and more evidence of a small but real and continual general decline in civilization.


    Additionally, I remember speaking to a lawyer a few years ago about foreclosures. He told me that most mortgages and notes are linked together in such a way that they are legally inseparable. The mortgage becomes unenforced if the note is sold. GMAC (I think) is finding that out now, but everyone else seems to otherwise ignore this to accommodate wall street. The entire system is corrupt and the world has accepted it as change you can believe in because the corruption is inching in and being made to appear benign and in the interest of the majority. The questionable stock market is another example of corruption you can believe in.








  14. Arequipa01 Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:13 am

    “the point of the matter is that they were LEGALLY evicted, until legal intervention was required to restore what was rightly theirs. And this can happen to anyone.” Very good point.


    This is an important element revealing that ownership in this country is becoming increasingly contingent. The CORPORATION is exercising executive control over instruments of the STATE. If you do not understand what that means and what its implications are, then please take some time to cogitate. And when you’re done, trying some metacogitating, and if that don’t help, well, son, there’s always marketing.








  15. gc Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:20 am

    and what part of your fortune comes from suing, likely on behalf of people who cannot afford to fight and who experience great distress to be in a lawsuit, to recover damages that are not allowed, and if awarded by a jury in a sympathetic trial court, won’t survive on appeal? You can build a fantasy around a cherry-picked single instance, but these types of errors are all over the place, and the courts are no more likely to bring everything to a halt than Bush/FED/Obama/congress were. Warren is “non-confirmable” because people fear that she just might be willing to bring everything to a halt. In this world, mark to market was changed when it stopped support bonuses and compensation. It is not the world where we allow a court to bring the Bank of America to its knees over one foreclosure.








  16. constantnormal Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:22 am

    @dead hobo — I agree completely — I’m just not fresh out of outrage yet.








  17. MinnItMan Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:24 am

    The acknowledgment that affidavits of default and the “attorney affidavits” used to establish the record for default judgments and judgments on the pleadings* (will explain if requested).


    From WaPo:


    “41-year-old Jeffrey Stephan was required to review cases to make sure the proceedings were legally justified and the information was accurate. He was also required to sign the documents in the presence of a notary.


    In a sworn deposition, he testified that he did neither.”


    This is very bad news for the lenders, the foreclosing attorneys, court administration and anyone who bought a post-forclosure REO property. A lot of the short-cutting used by the lender-foreclosure complex, IMO opinion, was fixable, but false sworn statements can’s be taken back, and thus will haunt the system for years. It’s early in this story, but all lawyers know this is the equivalent of the ball-bearing plants being bombed.


    Now, I don’t think these two stories are related. Foreclosing after the lender has been paid is a one-hand-doesn’t-know-what-the-other-hand-is doing problem. I agree that the court should have been asking questions about the two contradicting motions and I’m at a loss as to how they could be reconciled by the lender’s attorney. Nonetheless, the buyer here clearly has recourse. This story, screwed up as it is, is still an aberation, although it should be cautionary to anyone buying at a short sale that you better be getting insurance and guarantees against this.


    In the WaPa story, it’s a lot harder to see where this is going to go. For one thing, “document cases,” the core practice of foreclosure and collections attorneys where there is no answer or defense offered, and thus are usually defaulted, may become much less “routine” as courts may are now justified in asking for actual testimony, as opposed to relying on uncontradicted affidavits. These bad affidavits are the evidentiary basis for the judgment and calling these into question systematically, especially for docketed judgments, is going to make a lot of folks very sad.


    Go short on the processing companies or any publicly traded component of this system.








  18. rktbrkr Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:27 am

    BOA is correcting the error “at their own expense”, now thats really sweet of them, I wonder who else should be expected to pay.


    Florida started speeding up the FC process for the benefit of the banks (surprise) a few months ago, it seems like the banks are getting their way and the courts are rubber stamping their foreclosures. You’d think any bias by the courts would be with the homeys but I guess money talks louder.


    You have to wonder how many other fukkups are occurring in the sand states.








  19. constantnormal Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 10:36 am

    Hernando de Soto has authored an excellent book that attempts to answer the question of why so many other attempts to copy the US miracle of capitalism that works (he wrote it a few years back) have failed, and he comes down to the property title system that we inherited from the Brits, which permits exchange of property as a commodity. He provides extensive documentation in his book of how other nations have failed in this.


    Without such a system, the wealthy can pervert the system and legally steal property from the little people. This is where we are heading, in our journey to reshape the US into the world’s largest banana republic.


    Property rights are the bedrock upon which democracies reside. When property “rights” become fluid things, that bedrock is swept away.


    Here’s a short article on de Soto’s thesis: Cities of the Poor III: Law and Ownership








  20. Mark E Hoffer Says:



    September 23rd, 2010 at 11:03 am

    constantnormal Says: September 23rd, 2010 at 9:54 am


    @dead hobo — I think you’re missing the point here. MERS and a general laxity of documentation and procedure throughout the real estate industry has destroyed the chain of ownership, to the point that even people who own their homes outright may have have to defend their claims of ownership, and without the benefit of a strong chain of ownership documentation to support them. This is not merely an extreme oddity, but is a proof-by-example of this situation.


    The banks are not properly motivated, and tend to treat this as “oops, our bad”. It really doesn’t matter whether or not they were physically evicted — the point of the matter is that they were LEGALLY evicted, until legal intervention was required to restore what was rightly theirs. And this can happen to anyone.


    And even if the victims had been evicted and had to invest huge sums of time and money to correct the situation, nobody would get into trouble. Lehman, AIG, and a host of other ugly messes is proof enough of that.

    Diana Olick was right - the home price double dip is not only here, it is getting worse. RealtyTrac reported overnight that general foreclosure activity (i.e., default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions) — were reported on 338,836 properties in August, a 4 percent increase from the previous month. One in every 381 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing during the month. The spin is that this was a modest decline (5%) from August 2009, but represents another inflection point in a trend which up to now had been declining. “The trend lines of decreasing default notices and increasing bank repossessions converged in August, with virtually the same number of new default notices and bank repossessions for the month — a clear indication that the clogged foreclosure pipeline is being carefully managed on both ends by lenders and servicers,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. “On the front end, seriously delinquent loans are rolling into foreclosure at an unusually slow rate, while on the back end the dammed-up inventory of properties already in foreclosure is moving to REO in steady stream rather than a flood — presumably to prevent further erosion of home prices.” Of course, banks are doing all in their power to prevent the realization by the consumer class of just how much lower home prices have still to go. Most notably, the bulk of the foreclosure action in August occurred in bank repossessions, which came at 95,364 U.S. properties in August, the highest monthly total in the history of the report and about 2 percent higher than the previous peak of 93,777 bank repossessions (REOs) in May 2010. August REO activity increased 3 percent from the previous month and was up 25 percent from August 2009 — the ninth straight month where REOs have increased on a year-over-year basis. In other news, we expect Jim Cramer to come out with another call, like his wrong summer 2009 pronouncement that the bottom of housing is here.

    More from RealtyTrac:

    Nevada, Florida, Arizona post top state foreclosure rates in August

    Nevada continued to document the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate for the 44th straight month, with one in every 84 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing in August — 4.5 times the national average. Nevada maintained the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate despite a 25 percent year-over-year decrease in foreclosure activity in August — the 11th straight month where Nevada foreclosure activity has decreased on a year-over-year basis.

    Florida foreclosure activity decreased on a year-over-year basis for the fifth straight month in August, but the state’s foreclosure rate still ranked second highest among all states. One in every 155 Florida housing units received a foreclosure filing in August — 2.5 times the national average.

    One in every 165 Arizona housing units received a foreclosure filing in August, the nation’s third highest state foreclosure rate, and one in every 194 California housing units received a foreclosure filing in August, the nation’s fourth highest state foreclosure rate.

    One in every 220 Idaho housing units received a foreclosure filing in August, the nation’s fifth highest state foreclosure rate. A total of 2,915 Idaho properties received a foreclosure filing in August, an increase of nearly 9 percent from the previous month and an increase of 11 percent from August 2009. Idaho was the only state with a top 5 foreclosure rate to document a year-over-year increase in foreclosure activity.

    Other states with foreclosure rates ranking among the top 10 in August were Utah, Georgia, Michigan, Illinois and Hawaii.

    Five states account for more than 50 percent of national total

    California alone accounted for 20 percent of the national total in August, with 69,143 properties receiving a foreclosure filing during the month — a 3 percent increase from the previous month but a 25 percent decrease from August 2009.

    Florida accounted for nearly 17 percent of the national total, with 56,877 properties receiving a foreclosure filing — a 10 percent increase from the previous month but a 9 percent decrease from August 2009. Florida default notices were down 46 percent from August 2009 but increased 2 percent from the previous month, ending five straight months of month-over-month decreases in Florida default notices.

    Michigan, Illinois and Arizona each accounted for about 5 percent of the national total in August, with 17,764 Michigan properties receiving foreclosure filings, 16,808 Illinois properties receiving foreclosure filings, and 16,510 Arizona properties receiving foreclosure filings.

    Other states with foreclosure activity totals among the nation’s 10 highest in August were Georgia (16,366), Texas (14,290), Ohio (13,479), Nevada (13,385), and Washington (6,760).

    Metro foreclosure hot spots continue downward trend

    All 10 metro areas with the nation’s highest foreclosure rates in August posted year-over-year decreases in foreclosure activity for the second month in a row.

    The Las Vegas-Paradise, Nev., metro area documented the highest foreclosure rate among metropolitan areas with a population of 200,000 or more, with one in every 73 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing, despite a 25 percent decrease in foreclosure activity from August 2009.

    Foreclosure activity in Modesto, Calif., decreased 10 percent from August 2009, but the city still documented the nation’s second highest metro foreclosure rate, with one in every 95 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing in August. Six other California metro areas had foreclosure rates ranking among the top 10: Stockton at No. 3 (one in every 100 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing); Merced at No. 6 (one in 111); Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario at No. 7 (one in 113); Bakersfield at No. 8 (one in 120); Vallejo-Fairfield at No. 9 (one in 124); and Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville at No. 10 (one in 125).

    Two Florida metro areas registered foreclosure rates among the top 10: Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla., at No. 3, with one in every 104 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing; and Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach at No. 5, with one in every 111 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing.




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    42 Responses to “Man without Mortgage Loses Home in Foreclosure”







    1. Barry Ritholtz Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 7:24 am

      Un-Fucking-Believable . . .








    2. Dennis Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 7:36 am

      That is insane!








    3. stonedwino Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 8:22 am

      Really? Wow….B of A….what a clusterfuck…








    4. Robespierre Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 8:38 am

      And the music will not stop until someone goes to jail or is criminally charged in a very public way. Obama softness with the bankers has only embolden them. As they say “beatings will continue until moral improves”. Oh yes the foreclosed parties should just “suck it up and cope” after all these bankers are just doing God’s work








    5. dead hobo Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 8:59 am

      This is too high of a level view to be so negative. Yes, there was a screw up but nobody was tossed out and BoA says they will fix it. Except for a little paperwork, it doesn’t sound like anything else was messed up. Realistically, where are the damages assuming BoA puts everything back as it was and also assuming this high level view is the whole story? Not every screw up should be a profit opportunity if you know a lawyer.


      The bigger question is, “How did this happen?” Being my normal pessimistic self, I don’t think anyone will get into trouble for it because such things don’t happen anymore. Nor will anyone look into it.








    6. phb Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 9:08 am

      How, pray-tell, is the judge in this case not partially responsible? BOA is not solely responsible for this level of incompetence, I mean they were just trying to protect their interest (albeit in error). All involved other than the victim, need to pay for this fiasco. IMHO of course.








    7. dead hobo Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 9:39 am

      BR, calm down. Yes, these poor people got screwed over but they will be made whole and nobody will get into trouble for it.


      Here’s something to cheer about. The labor news was quite dismal.


      Assuming the past can be used to predict the future, the S&P should go for the moon today and hit a new high. For the past year, and especially over the past few weeks, virtually all bad economic news is accompanied by a strong rise in the markets.


      Maybe this is some of the change you can believe in. Before this, bad news was usually accompanied by market declines until good news appeared. Today, all news makes the markets rise.


      Now that’s fucking unbelievable.








    8. whatever Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 9:44 am

      But..but, dont we want protection for our corporations? Otherwise, they wont invest and wont create jobs.

      We should protect our corporations against any lawsuits. At the minimum, any ruling against them will be capped at $50.

      Thats how we create jobs in America.








    9. tspck Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 9:53 am

      . . . so a couple of flunkies at ACORN cooperate in a prostitution scheme and there is literally an act of congress to disembowel the organization . . . but here when the action was conducted in a court of law, with hot and cold running lawyers, it’s “mistake may happen” and “don’t overreact”. How come?








    10. constantnormal Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 9:54 am

      @dead hobo — I think you’re missing the point here. MERS and a general laxity of documentation and procedure throughout the real estate industry has destroyed the chain of ownership, to the point that even people who own their homes outright may have have to defend their claims of ownership, and without the benefit of a strong chain of ownership documentation to support them. This is not merely an extreme oddity, but is a proof-by-example of this situation.


      The banks are not properly motivated, and tend to treat this as “oops, our bad”. It really doesn’t matter whether or not they were physically evicted — the point of the matter is that they were LEGALLY evicted, until legal intervention was required to restore what was rightly theirs. And this can happen to anyone.


      And even if the victims had been evicted and had to invest huge sums of time and money to correct the situation, nobody would get into trouble. Lehman, AIG, and a host of other ugly messes is proof enough of that.








    11. Calvin Jones and the 13th Apostle Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 9:56 am

      Dead Hobo:

      Don’t you understand what’s going on re: the markets?








    12. Arequipa01 Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:08 am

      “Bank of America has acknowledged the error and will correct it at its own expense, said spokeswoman Jumana Bauwens.”


      It is not ‘an error’. It is part and parcel of an ongoing criminal conspiracy. The significant problem here is the likelihood that the Banks will defang the Judiciary or as they say en el Perú, aquí no pasa na aaa…


      There is a lot out there on this issue. A good place to start is the Landmark case.


      http://loanworkout.org/2009/09/landmark-v-kesler-mers-kansas/








    13. dead hobo Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:10 am

      constantnormal Says:

      September 23rd, 2010 at 9:54 am


      @dead hobo — I think you’re missing the point here. MERS and a general laxity of documentation and procedure throughout the real estate industry has destroyed the chain of ownership, to the point that even people who own their homes outright may have have to defend their claims of ownership, and without the benefit of a strong chain of ownership documentation to support them.


      reply:

      ———-

      We just use the county recorder here to record ownership and security interests. Plus title insurance. Most jurisdictions do things in a similar way, I assume. If a bank stole my paid for house, I would first try to turn in into a winning lottery ticket, but would probably be disappointed and maybe get a free toaster as a premium after they fixed the problem.


      Agreed the foreclosure system is a mess, but the mess is cohesive and likely to remain a mess no matter who complains about it. I’m just adjusting to reality and more evidence of a small but real and continual general decline in civilization.


      Additionally, I remember speaking to a lawyer a few years ago about foreclosures. He told me that most mortgages and notes are linked together in such a way that they are legally inseparable. The mortgage becomes unenforced if the note is sold. GMAC (I think) is finding that out now, but everyone else seems to otherwise ignore this to accommodate wall street. The entire system is corrupt and the world has accepted it as change you can believe in because the corruption is inching in and being made to appear benign and in the interest of the majority. The questionable stock market is another example of corruption you can believe in.








    14. Arequipa01 Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:13 am

      “the point of the matter is that they were LEGALLY evicted, until legal intervention was required to restore what was rightly theirs. And this can happen to anyone.” Very good point.


      This is an important element revealing that ownership in this country is becoming increasingly contingent. The CORPORATION is exercising executive control over instruments of the STATE. If you do not understand what that means and what its implications are, then please take some time to cogitate. And when you’re done, trying some metacogitating, and if that don’t help, well, son, there’s always marketing.








    15. gc Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:20 am

      and what part of your fortune comes from suing, likely on behalf of people who cannot afford to fight and who experience great distress to be in a lawsuit, to recover damages that are not allowed, and if awarded by a jury in a sympathetic trial court, won’t survive on appeal? You can build a fantasy around a cherry-picked single instance, but these types of errors are all over the place, and the courts are no more likely to bring everything to a halt than Bush/FED/Obama/congress were. Warren is “non-confirmable” because people fear that she just might be willing to bring everything to a halt. In this world, mark to market was changed when it stopped support bonuses and compensation. It is not the world where we allow a court to bring the Bank of America to its knees over one foreclosure.








    16. constantnormal Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:22 am

      @dead hobo — I agree completely — I’m just not fresh out of outrage yet.








    17. MinnItMan Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:24 am

      The acknowledgment that affidavits of default and the “attorney affidavits” used to establish the record for default judgments and judgments on the pleadings* (will explain if requested).


      From WaPo:


      “41-year-old Jeffrey Stephan was required to review cases to make sure the proceedings were legally justified and the information was accurate. He was also required to sign the documents in the presence of a notary.


      In a sworn deposition, he testified that he did neither.”


      This is very bad news for the lenders, the foreclosing attorneys, court administration and anyone who bought a post-forclosure REO property. A lot of the short-cutting used by the lender-foreclosure complex, IMO opinion, was fixable, but false sworn statements can’s be taken back, and thus will haunt the system for years. It’s early in this story, but all lawyers know this is the equivalent of the ball-bearing plants being bombed.


      Now, I don’t think these two stories are related. Foreclosing after the lender has been paid is a one-hand-doesn’t-know-what-the-other-hand-is doing problem. I agree that the court should have been asking questions about the two contradicting motions and I’m at a loss as to how they could be reconciled by the lender’s attorney. Nonetheless, the buyer here clearly has recourse. This story, screwed up as it is, is still an aberation, although it should be cautionary to anyone buying at a short sale that you better be getting insurance and guarantees against this.


      In the WaPa story, it’s a lot harder to see where this is going to go. For one thing, “document cases,” the core practice of foreclosure and collections attorneys where there is no answer or defense offered, and thus are usually defaulted, may become much less “routine” as courts may are now justified in asking for actual testimony, as opposed to relying on uncontradicted affidavits. These bad affidavits are the evidentiary basis for the judgment and calling these into question systematically, especially for docketed judgments, is going to make a lot of folks very sad.


      Go short on the processing companies or any publicly traded component of this system.








    18. rktbrkr Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:27 am

      BOA is correcting the error “at their own expense”, now thats really sweet of them, I wonder who else should be expected to pay.


      Florida started speeding up the FC process for the benefit of the banks (surprise) a few months ago, it seems like the banks are getting their way and the courts are rubber stamping their foreclosures. You’d think any bias by the courts would be with the homeys but I guess money talks louder.


      You have to wonder how many other fukkups are occurring in the sand states.








    19. constantnormal Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 10:36 am

      Hernando de Soto has authored an excellent book that attempts to answer the question of why so many other attempts to copy the US miracle of capitalism that works (he wrote it a few years back) have failed, and he comes down to the property title system that we inherited from the Brits, which permits exchange of property as a commodity. He provides extensive documentation in his book of how other nations have failed in this.


      Without such a system, the wealthy can pervert the system and legally steal property from the little people. This is where we are heading, in our journey to reshape the US into the world’s largest banana republic.


      Property rights are the bedrock upon which democracies reside. When property “rights” become fluid things, that bedrock is swept away.


      Here’s a short article on de Soto’s thesis: Cities of the Poor III: Law and Ownership








    20. Mark E Hoffer Says:



      September 23rd, 2010 at 11:03 am

      constantnormal Says: September 23rd, 2010 at 9:54 am


      @dead hobo — I think you’re missing the point here. MERS and a general laxity of documentation and procedure throughout the real estate industry has destroyed the chain of ownership, to the point that even people who own their homes outright may have have to defend their claims of ownership, and without the benefit of a strong chain of ownership documentation to support them. This is not merely an extreme oddity, but is a proof-by-example of this situation.


      The banks are not properly motivated, and tend to treat this as “oops, our bad”. It really doesn’t matter whether or not they were physically evicted — the point of the matter is that they were LEGALLY evicted, until legal intervention was required to restore what was rightly theirs. And this can happen to anyone.


      And even if the victims had been evicted and had to invest huge sums of time and money to correct the situation, nobody would get into trouble. Lehman, AIG, and a host of other ugly messes is proof enough of that.

      Diana Olick was right - the home price double dip is not only here, it is getting worse. RealtyTrac reported overnight that general foreclosure activity (i.e., default notices, scheduled auctions and bank repossessions) — were reported on 338,836 properties in August, a 4 percent increase from the previous month. One in every 381 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing during the month. The spin is that this was a modest decline (5%) from August 2009, but represents another inflection point in a trend which up to now had been declining. “The trend lines of decreasing default notices and increasing bank repossessions converged in August, with virtually the same number of new default notices and bank repossessions for the month — a clear indication that the clogged foreclosure pipeline is being carefully managed on both ends by lenders and servicers,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. “On the front end, seriously delinquent loans are rolling into foreclosure at an unusually slow rate, while on the back end the dammed-up inventory of properties already in foreclosure is moving to REO in steady stream rather than a flood — presumably to prevent further erosion of home prices.” Of course, banks are doing all in their power to prevent the realization by the consumer class of just how much lower home prices have still to go. Most notably, the bulk of the foreclosure action in August occurred in bank repossessions, which came at 95,364 U.S. properties in August, the highest monthly total in the history of the report and about 2 percent higher than the previous peak of 93,777 bank repossessions (REOs) in May 2010. August REO activity increased 3 percent from the previous month and was up 25 percent from August 2009 — the ninth straight month where REOs have increased on a year-over-year basis. In other news, we expect Jim Cramer to come out with another call, like his wrong summer 2009 pronouncement that the bottom of housing is here.

      More from RealtyTrac:

      Nevada, Florida, Arizona post top state foreclosure rates in August

      Nevada continued to document the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate for the 44th straight month, with one in every 84 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing in August — 4.5 times the national average. Nevada maintained the nation’s highest state foreclosure rate despite a 25 percent year-over-year decrease in foreclosure activity in August — the 11th straight month where Nevada foreclosure activity has decreased on a year-over-year basis.

      Florida foreclosure activity decreased on a year-over-year basis for the fifth straight month in August, but the state’s foreclosure rate still ranked second highest among all states. One in every 155 Florida housing units received a foreclosure filing in August — 2.5 times the national average.

      One in every 165 Arizona housing units received a foreclosure filing in August, the nation’s third highest state foreclosure rate, and one in every 194 California housing units received a foreclosure filing in August, the nation’s fourth highest state foreclosure rate.

      One in every 220 Idaho housing units received a foreclosure filing in August, the nation’s fifth highest state foreclosure rate. A total of 2,915 Idaho properties received a foreclosure filing in August, an increase of nearly 9 percent from the previous month and an increase of 11 percent from August 2009. Idaho was the only state with a top 5 foreclosure rate to document a year-over-year increase in foreclosure activity.

      Other states with foreclosure rates ranking among the top 10 in August were Utah, Georgia, Michigan, Illinois and Hawaii.

      Five states account for more than 50 percent of national total

      California alone accounted for 20 percent of the national total in August, with 69,143 properties receiving a foreclosure filing during the month — a 3 percent increase from the previous month but a 25 percent decrease from August 2009.

      Florida accounted for nearly 17 percent of the national total, with 56,877 properties receiving a foreclosure filing — a 10 percent increase from the previous month but a 9 percent decrease from August 2009. Florida default notices were down 46 percent from August 2009 but increased 2 percent from the previous month, ending five straight months of month-over-month decreases in Florida default notices.

      Michigan, Illinois and Arizona each accounted for about 5 percent of the national total in August, with 17,764 Michigan properties receiving foreclosure filings, 16,808 Illinois properties receiving foreclosure filings, and 16,510 Arizona properties receiving foreclosure filings.

      Other states with foreclosure activity totals among the nation’s 10 highest in August were Georgia (16,366), Texas (14,290), Ohio (13,479), Nevada (13,385), and Washington (6,760).

      Metro foreclosure hot spots continue downward trend

      All 10 metro areas with the nation’s highest foreclosure rates in August posted year-over-year decreases in foreclosure activity for the second month in a row.

      The Las Vegas-Paradise, Nev., metro area documented the highest foreclosure rate among metropolitan areas with a population of 200,000 or more, with one in every 73 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing, despite a 25 percent decrease in foreclosure activity from August 2009.

      Foreclosure activity in Modesto, Calif., decreased 10 percent from August 2009, but the city still documented the nation’s second highest metro foreclosure rate, with one in every 95 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing in August. Six other California metro areas had foreclosure rates ranking among the top 10: Stockton at No. 3 (one in every 100 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing); Merced at No. 6 (one in 111); Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario at No. 7 (one in 113); Bakersfield at No. 8 (one in 120); Vallejo-Fairfield at No. 9 (one in 124); and Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville at No. 10 (one in 125).

      Two Florida metro areas registered foreclosure rates among the top 10: Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla., at No. 3, with one in every 104 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing; and Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach at No. 5, with one in every 111 housing units receiving a foreclosure filing.





      Foreclosure protest at San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank by Steve Rhodes


      robert shumake

      &#39;Fox <b>News</b> Sunday&#39; to Host Kentucky Senate Debate - NYTimes.com

      Jack Conway, Kentucky's attorney general and the Democratic candidate for Senate, and Rand Paul, the Republican nominee, have agreed to a live debate on "Fox News Sunday" on Oct. 3.

      Official Google Blog: Google <b>News</b> turns eight

      Today we celebrate the eighth birthday of Google News. Not long after the tragic events of September 11, 2001, we started building and testing Google News with the aim of helping you find current events from a wide variety of global and ...

      Aaron Brown: Cable <b>News</b> Is Too Political

      Aaron Brown said in an interview that he is unhappy with the current state of cable news. Brown, who was a prominent anchor on CNN from 2001-2005 and now teaches journalism at Arizona State University, spoke to the online website ...


      robert shumake

      &#39;Fox <b>News</b> Sunday&#39; to Host Kentucky Senate Debate - NYTimes.com

      Jack Conway, Kentucky's attorney general and the Democratic candidate for Senate, and Rand Paul, the Republican nominee, have agreed to a live debate on "Fox News Sunday" on Oct. 3.

      Official Google Blog: Google <b>News</b> turns eight

      Today we celebrate the eighth birthday of Google News. Not long after the tragic events of September 11, 2001, we started building and testing Google News with the aim of helping you find current events from a wide variety of global and ...

      Aaron Brown: Cable <b>News</b> Is Too Political

      Aaron Brown said in an interview that he is unhappy with the current state of cable news. Brown, who was a prominent anchor on CNN from 2001-2005 and now teaches journalism at Arizona State University, spoke to the online website ...

















Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Make Making Money


Social games are the rage these days, but making money from them isn’t easy. Gamers play these titles for free, but Adknowledge is figuring out how game publishers can wind up making money from 100 percent of the players.


Adknowledge’s Burlingame, Calif.-based Super Rewards subsidiary is launching a three-part system for making money from virtual currency in games. That could help boost the engagement of players in social games and help raise the revenue generated from each user, said Adknowledge chief executive Scott Lynn. Adknowledge can offer this money-making system as a one-stop shop for publishers and game advertisers.


The three elements include an in-game overlay, offer banners, and a new offer wall for online game publishers. Adknowledge claims the new platform improves the experience for users and increases the number of paying users in a game. Adknowledge is one of a number of companies that give users the option of accepting special offers in lieu of payment for an online game. You can accept an offer such as signing up for a Netflix subscription in return for virtual currency in a game.


But results show that roughly 75 percent of players do not use offers. Super Rewards can target those missing the offers with an in-game overlay, which brings a single, high-value offer to users within a game. The overlay shows up at strategic moments in a game, such as after the initial load. The offers can include promotional language such as “Get More Coins.”


The offer banner uses the space around the main game landscape, presenting a mini version of an offer wall during game play. Users can pay for virtual items at the moment with direct payment methods.


Publishers using the three-part system include The Broth, whose Facebook game Barn Buddy saw its revenue increase 25 percent after using the new system for just five days, said Broth chief executive Markus Weichselbaum. Other publishers have seen a 45 percent increase in the number of new paying users. Adknowledge said developers have seen a 40-percent increase in the number of first-time payers. Super Rewards’ rivals include TrialPay and Offerpal.


Adknowledge has more than 300 employees and $300 million in revenue, making it the largest privately owned internet advertising network. It was founded in 2004 and has grown through acquisitions. The company has raised $48 million in funding from Technology Crossover Ventures.


Next Story: Game media firm IGN Entertainment to give free office space to indie game startups Previous Story: DEMO: VentureBeat’s Matt Marshall touts tech and farming trends (video)






Newsmax sent out an email today to
its mailing list touting the presence of Sarah Palin in “a special pre-election
webcast series we will be airing exclusively online” starting October 12.
According to the email, the webcast, to be called “Make America Great Again,”
will be hosted by Michael Reagan and feature Palin as well as “other opinion
leaders such as Dick Morris.”





Morris, of course, has been a longtime
marquee participant in shilling for Newsmax’s money-making schemes. Like
Palin, Morris is a Fox News contributor, making her at least the third Fox News
employee to team up with Newsmax; the other is Bill O’Reilly, who did an
interview featured in an informercial for yet another financial
product (though Fox News denied that it knew O’Reilly would be used in that way).
Palin has also previously touted Newsmax as one of the news sources she reads.



It wouldn’t be Newsmax, though, if
it wasn’t using people like Palin to try and sell you something.


If you sign up for this webcast, you
are directed to a web page (PDF) that gives you the opportunity to upgrade your Palin experience --
for a price, of course. You can continue to pay nothing and receive only “Brief
Clips of the Exclusive Interviews With Governor Palin, Dick Morris, Mike
Reagan, and the Entire Lineup of Important Guests” and “Limited Access to the
‘Make America Great Again’ Attendee Website.” Or you could pay $9.95 to be a
“VIP Member” and receive “Unlimited Access to the Make America Great Again
Campaign, PLUS” a copy of Palin’s forthcoming book.
You also get trial subscriptions to Newsmax’s magazine and one of its financial
reports, which has the usual caveat that you must cancel before the trial
period ends to avoid being automatically charged for a year’s subscription to
them.


Or you can pay Newsmax an extra $20 not
to send you the magazine and newsletter; a $29.95 “Book Subscription” gives you
“all of the benefits of VIP access as noted above, as well as Sarah Palin’s
upcoming new book, but you will NOT receive free trial subscriptions to Newsmax
magazine and The Franklin Prosperity Report.” Seeking payment for not doing
something is an interesting money-making strategy, and it’s a big clue as to
how much the profitability of Newsmax’s promotion depends on people forgetting to
cancel their trial subscriptions.


The web page also gives previews of
the webcast series, which looks like it will be mostly about attacking Obama, reinforcing right-wing talking points,
and encouraging conservatives to vote in November. It also sycophantically
calls Morris “the top political strategist and the man Time magazine referred to as ‘the most
influential private citizen in America’
” – which, as we’ve previously noted,
it did just before Morris resigned in disgrace from Bill Clinton's 1996 re-election
campaign.


Newsmax may not be selling financial
schemes for once, but it sure has a connection with Fox News that it has no
problem exploiting.



Phil Pruitt Joins Yahoo! <b>News</b> As Politics Editor

USA Today Deputy Managing Editor/News Phil Pruitt has left the newspaper to join Yahoo! News as its new Politics editor.

Facebook claims 200 million gamers <b>News</b> - Page 1 | Eurogamer.net

Read our news of Facebook claims 200 million gamers.

Premier League football <b>news</b> from the Barclays Premier League <b>...</b>

Check out the latest Premier League football news from the Barclays Premier League.


robert shumake

Phil Pruitt Joins Yahoo! <b>News</b> As Politics Editor

USA Today Deputy Managing Editor/News Phil Pruitt has left the newspaper to join Yahoo! News as its new Politics editor.

Facebook claims 200 million gamers <b>News</b> - Page 1 | Eurogamer.net

Read our news of Facebook claims 200 million gamers.

Premier League football <b>news</b> from the Barclays Premier League <b>...</b>

Check out the latest Premier League football news from the Barclays Premier League.



Social games are the rage these days, but making money from them isn’t easy. Gamers play these titles for free, but Adknowledge is figuring out how game publishers can wind up making money from 100 percent of the players.


Adknowledge’s Burlingame, Calif.-based Super Rewards subsidiary is launching a three-part system for making money from virtual currency in games. That could help boost the engagement of players in social games and help raise the revenue generated from each user, said Adknowledge chief executive Scott Lynn. Adknowledge can offer this money-making system as a one-stop shop for publishers and game advertisers.


The three elements include an in-game overlay, offer banners, and a new offer wall for online game publishers. Adknowledge claims the new platform improves the experience for users and increases the number of paying users in a game. Adknowledge is one of a number of companies that give users the option of accepting special offers in lieu of payment for an online game. You can accept an offer such as signing up for a Netflix subscription in return for virtual currency in a game.


But results show that roughly 75 percent of players do not use offers. Super Rewards can target those missing the offers with an in-game overlay, which brings a single, high-value offer to users within a game. The overlay shows up at strategic moments in a game, such as after the initial load. The offers can include promotional language such as “Get More Coins.”


The offer banner uses the space around the main game landscape, presenting a mini version of an offer wall during game play. Users can pay for virtual items at the moment with direct payment methods.


Publishers using the three-part system include The Broth, whose Facebook game Barn Buddy saw its revenue increase 25 percent after using the new system for just five days, said Broth chief executive Markus Weichselbaum. Other publishers have seen a 45 percent increase in the number of new paying users. Adknowledge said developers have seen a 40-percent increase in the number of first-time payers. Super Rewards’ rivals include TrialPay and Offerpal.


Adknowledge has more than 300 employees and $300 million in revenue, making it the largest privately owned internet advertising network. It was founded in 2004 and has grown through acquisitions. The company has raised $48 million in funding from Technology Crossover Ventures.


Next Story: Game media firm IGN Entertainment to give free office space to indie game startups Previous Story: DEMO: VentureBeat’s Matt Marshall touts tech and farming trends (video)






Newsmax sent out an email today to
its mailing list touting the presence of Sarah Palin in “a special pre-election
webcast series we will be airing exclusively online” starting October 12.
According to the email, the webcast, to be called “Make America Great Again,”
will be hosted by Michael Reagan and feature Palin as well as “other opinion
leaders such as Dick Morris.”





Morris, of course, has been a longtime
marquee participant in shilling for Newsmax’s money-making schemes. Like
Palin, Morris is a Fox News contributor, making her at least the third Fox News
employee to team up with Newsmax; the other is Bill O’Reilly, who did an
interview featured in an informercial for yet another financial
product (though Fox News denied that it knew O’Reilly would be used in that way).
Palin has also previously touted Newsmax as one of the news sources she reads.



It wouldn’t be Newsmax, though, if
it wasn’t using people like Palin to try and sell you something.


If you sign up for this webcast, you
are directed to a web page (PDF) that gives you the opportunity to upgrade your Palin experience --
for a price, of course. You can continue to pay nothing and receive only “Brief
Clips of the Exclusive Interviews With Governor Palin, Dick Morris, Mike
Reagan, and the Entire Lineup of Important Guests” and “Limited Access to the
‘Make America Great Again’ Attendee Website.” Or you could pay $9.95 to be a
“VIP Member” and receive “Unlimited Access to the Make America Great Again
Campaign, PLUS” a copy of Palin’s forthcoming book.
You also get trial subscriptions to Newsmax’s magazine and one of its financial
reports, which has the usual caveat that you must cancel before the trial
period ends to avoid being automatically charged for a year’s subscription to
them.


Or you can pay Newsmax an extra $20 not
to send you the magazine and newsletter; a $29.95 “Book Subscription” gives you
“all of the benefits of VIP access as noted above, as well as Sarah Palin’s
upcoming new book, but you will NOT receive free trial subscriptions to Newsmax
magazine and The Franklin Prosperity Report.” Seeking payment for not doing
something is an interesting money-making strategy, and it’s a big clue as to
how much the profitability of Newsmax’s promotion depends on people forgetting to
cancel their trial subscriptions.


The web page also gives previews of
the webcast series, which looks like it will be mostly about attacking Obama, reinforcing right-wing talking points,
and encouraging conservatives to vote in November. It also sycophantically
calls Morris “the top political strategist and the man Time magazine referred to as ‘the most
influential private citizen in America’
” – which, as we’ve previously noted,
it did just before Morris resigned in disgrace from Bill Clinton's 1996 re-election
campaign.


Newsmax may not be selling financial
schemes for once, but it sure has a connection with Fox News that it has no
problem exploiting.




Make Cash Money Giving Away FREE ebook by GlobalMarketingMoney


robert shumake

Phil Pruitt Joins Yahoo! <b>News</b> As Politics Editor

USA Today Deputy Managing Editor/News Phil Pruitt has left the newspaper to join Yahoo! News as its new Politics editor.

Facebook claims 200 million gamers <b>News</b> - Page 1 | Eurogamer.net

Read our news of Facebook claims 200 million gamers.

Premier League football <b>news</b> from the Barclays Premier League <b>...</b>

Check out the latest Premier League football news from the Barclays Premier League.


robert shumake

Phil Pruitt Joins Yahoo! <b>News</b> As Politics Editor

USA Today Deputy Managing Editor/News Phil Pruitt has left the newspaper to join Yahoo! News as its new Politics editor.

Facebook claims 200 million gamers <b>News</b> - Page 1 | Eurogamer.net

Read our news of Facebook claims 200 million gamers.

Premier League football <b>news</b> from the Barclays Premier League <b>...</b>

Check out the latest Premier League football news from the Barclays Premier League.