So did anyone else read this?
http://www.philipsandifer.com/2015/06/doctor-who-online-sebastian-j-brook-and.html
I notice a few sockpuppets in the comments and some blowing of hot air but no actual rebuttal? Anyone bought ads off this guy?
This isn't a particularly pleasant post, I'm afraid, but it's an important one. I've spoken occasionally about the fact that it's vital for freelance creators to be open about where their money comes from and how much they make, and especially to be vocal when someone rips them off. Today we have a case study in why that is: a high profile Doctor Who fansite that has been around for nearly twenty years, and that is serially defrauding members of the Doctor Who fan community by offering expensive advertising on the back of false promises, and that has gotten away with it largely because until now, nobody had actually reached out to the site's victims and collected their stories.
The site is Doctor Who Online, run by Sebastian J. Brook. It's a longstanding site, founded in 1996. They have an active forum and over 100,000 Twitter followers. Their podcast is up to its 349th episode. And the site is, in practice, a front for a series of breathtakingly fraudulent business practices designed to rip off small and independent business owners.
What follows is an explanation of how Doctor Who Online's fraud operates, and a compilation of the evidence I have gathered demonstrating that this is standard business practice for the site. Although I am not a legal expert by any means, it is my sincere belief that the site's business practices, as documented below, constitute fraud by false representation under UK law.
http://www.philipsandifer.com/2015/06/doctor-who-online-sebastian-j-brook-and.html
I notice a few sockpuppets in the comments and some blowing of hot air but no actual rebuttal? Anyone bought ads off this guy?