Apologies for the ugly site theme. Just doing some unscheduled maintenance.
Site Maintenance
This entry was written by Robert Koehler, posted on June 16, 2008 at 9:21 pm, filed under South Korea. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.



10 Comments
Rob, what’s ugly is the Korean Cupid girl. She started out cute, but it’s like eating bananas every day. Same face just gets more disgusting as the months wear on.
This obviously does not apply to spouses!…
I agree, but she’s better than the gay matchmaking ad that’s started popping up lately.
dogbert,
I’m not getting that. Sure it’s not based on analytics and click history?
J/K!… yeah I get it too.
Darn, I missed the ugly site theme. Please give more notice next time. Thanks
You getting old or something? I woke up and was shocked at the new giant-size font scheme!
Please do something about the gay asian ads. This is supposed to be a respectable, family-oriented blog.
The new design is pretty, but Bad Behaviour doesn’t seem to be working. You need to go to options -> comments -> filters and make sure the right-wing red neck box has a tick
@3: LOL … I cleared my cache and cross-eyed girl is back.
@6
This is supposed to be a respectable, family-oriented blog.
If we asked Robert if he had to directly OK each sponsored advertising link do you think he would answer. I’m not sure, but, I think he did.
The best way to deal with such unwanted advertising on the Internet is to engage in click fraud. Everytime you click on the gay asians link they have to pay money to robert. Thats money robert gets and gay asian singles dont get (their disposable incums are too large anyway).
Eventually the Gay asian singles realize their advertising budget is being siphoned off by robert due to hetero asian singles up the marmots hole and they give up.
Everybody wins.
@10 that would probably work but:
1) those g@y sites probably go thru google ads and appear on thousands of sites, and don’t bother tracing all the clicks.
2) I suppose most of the rest of us aren’t aren’t going to be as interested in spending time to click g@y love ads.
3) I’m not sure the pay-per-click model is how it works. About 10 years ago, in the early days of the internet, one of my fraternity brothers signed up to host ads for several p0rn sites, set up a sophisticated bot that clicked on them day and night, and was making 10~15K/month. Some months (and a downpayment on a house, a new car, and big TV, etc.) later, his profits dropped quickly as the p0rn industry changed how they paid ad hosters. Commission was only paid for referals that resulted in memberships. They were much larger commissions, but he obviously wasn’t going to get a single one. He unplugged the computer. Of course, for reason #1, the pay-per-click might be back.
instead of that, anyone can download and configure ad blocker software.
and since when is this a respectable, family-oriented blog?