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Stanford's guidelines for web credibility

51 pointsby marketerover 16 years ago

5 comments

somepersonover 16 years ago
Is it just me or are all the guidelines listed just plain common sense?
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ScottWhighamover 16 years ago
<i>"Avoid errors of all types, no matter how small they seem."</i><p>Thanks you, Standford! I feal that you have opened up a door in my mind and I will never bee the same!!1
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Bjoernover 16 years ago
I concurr with the previous comments that most of these "guidelines" are common sense and this is definetly not groundbreaking.<p>What is nice though is that you have a statistical "verified" list which is &#62;most&#60; and with is &#62;least&#60; important of the common sense we already know.<p>Another thing why this could be probably^W interesting is that it could influence e.g. goverment, or other institutional sites.
tuukkahover 16 years ago
<i>8. Update your site's content often (at least show it's been reviewed recently).</i><p>"Updated June, 2002"<p><i>Typographical errors and broken links hurt a site's credibility more than most people imagine. It's also important to keep your site up and running.</i><p>"The domain www.webcredibility.org which you are trying to access is currently unavailable."
josefrescoover 16 years ago
<i>This</i> is what students at Stanford are getting academic credit for?