Or maybe they're already here (my company's firewall blocks most ads, so I don't see many of them).
But since you've admitted that there's extra ad inventory, that would seem like a natural fit to fill in some of it.
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Or maybe they're already here (my company's firewall blocks most ads, so I don't see many of them). But since you've admitted that there's extra ad inventory, that would seem like a natural fit to fill in some of it. |
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I guess the only problem would be if you start adding FogBugz ads, you aren't actually generating ad revenue, you are attempting to use your ad revenue generating space to try and generate other revenue (unless Joel actually pays to have his own ads on a site he helped found). Naturally I think advertising for their products would be logical, but I could also see why you wouldn't want to potentially cut out other advertisers from paying to actually use that space. |
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FogBugz is a Product of FogCreek, the StackOverflow family of sites is a product of StackOverflow.com LLC. Essentially two different companies (even though StackExchange makes their relationship a bit blurry), and I doubt that Jeff gets money for FogBugz sales. So realistically, FogCreek would have to pay money to StackOverflow.com LLC, so for them it boils down to the question: "Is it worth advertising FogBugz on StackOverflow?", and I assume that question either never came up or was answered negatively. I think that advertising for StackExchange would be more logical than for FogBugz, but I assume they will come as soon as SE is out of beta. |
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If FogCreek is willing to pay for the ad space, I don't see why not. And I think that it would be best if FogCreek did pay for ad space if they wanted it. Otherwise, other vendors of bug tracking solutions may raise a cry about preferential treatment. |
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