Skip to Content

Listen to the Joystiq Podcast (because your ears can't read)

Exclusive: Web watchdog site shut down by Consumers Union

More
Text SizeAAA

Filed under: Technology, Fraud, Recession

Consumer Reports WebWatch, a well-known watchdog site that detailed web-based scams and schemes and worked to educate consumers about online perils, is being shut down by its parent, Consumers Union, Walletpop,com has learned.

WebWatch started eight years ago, and in its early years it was a grant-fueled project backed by The Pew Charitable Trusts, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and the Open Society Institute. But that grant ended a few years ago and the non-profit advocacy group Consumers Union, the publisher of Consumer Reports, had been shouldering the costs since.

"We've decided we're not able to continue it," Consumers Union Vice President Ken Weine said. "It was a dollars and cents issue."



The staff of two, he said, will lose their jobs. WebWatch director Beau Brendler, who has been with the project since the beginning, is already gone.

"I am seeking to continue the type of work WebWatch did on behalf of consumers," Brendler said.

Weine said it is not unusual for grant-funded projects to be shut down after the funding dries up. He said Consumers Union supported the project beyond what it was required to as a condition of receiving the grants. Grant funding started in 2001 and ended in 2005, he said, and Consumers Union continued operations since.

Robert Mayer, a University of Utah professor who served as an advisor to WebWatch, said he wasn't surprised that the project was shut down given the financial situation in the publishing industry and at Consumers Union.

"From a purely practical point of view, I hope that CU continues to make WebWatch's research reports readily available, because I refer to them quite often," he said.

The site is still up and functioning, but Weine said no decisions have been made about whether it will remain up and, if so, in what form.

Note: The author was a consultant to WebWatch several years ago.
Subscribe to Walletpop
How to Wear a Scarf
Scarves are a great way to dress up an otherwise drab outfit and can be layered with everything from ...
The Health Benefits of Massage
Massages are a wonderful luxury and also one of the few traditionally "guilty pleasures" that aren't ...

Your Frugal Tips

dollar bill in sandwichBeing frugal is now hip, but many don't even know where to start. Share your best money-saving secrets here!

    AOL Safeguards

    Andrea Chalupa
    Andrea Chalupa Filed under: Extracurriculars, Wealth, Bankruptcy, Video

    How to hustle like a Pawn Star: Watch new season on History Channel

    On WalletPop's Big News Podcast, Jason Cochran and I chatted up Rick Harrison, owner of the Gold and Silver pawn shop in Las Vegas, Nevada and one of the stars of the History Channel's Pawn Stars. ...
    Aaron Crowe
    Aaron Crowe Filed under: Career, Recession

    Advice for Obama job summit: Create a solar WPA

    President Obama is having a job summit on Thursday, gathering 130 business leaders, mayors and others to help figure out how to get the 15.7 million unemployed people in America back to work. As ...
    Bob Cesca
    Bob Cesca Filed under: Banks, Borrowing

    Senate bank bill could allow 'too big to fail' banks to grow even bigger

    The chain grocery store where my wife and I shop has a bank in it. There's the frozen food section, the bakery section, the pharmacy and ... the bank. It's not even a particularly large grocery store, ...
    Barbara Bartlein
    Barbara Bartlein Filed under: Budgets, Saving Money, Tax

    Is NASA still the best use of US tax dollars?

    Despite cost overruns totaling nearly $1.1 billion in nine of its flagship projects, NASA will see its 2010 fiscal year budget increase to $18.7 billion. Combined with the $1 billion NASA got from the ...

    Headlines from WalletPop Partners