I'm going to take a minute to think from someone else's shoes. If you've seen my posts in the now 3 threads on this, you know know where I stand. But..... if I take a step back, from a systems and biz management perspective, there is a partial explanation.
If I had my own provider resource site (not a hobbyist resource), I'd want it to provide a few things. Maybe more, but at least these:
Advertising space
Booking support
Provider info exchange (alerts for safety, fetishes, neighborhoods, hotel risks, etc)
In-call coordination
For someone who is an indy, paying a support service (they do exist and aren't pimps), a phone number that I can answer when I want, or send to someone else to answer when I don't want to, is an ideal solution. Google Voice is perfect for that, and a big portion of its design. It does not excuse masquerading as the provider. Many providers I've met state they have booking agents, and the booker is upfront about not being the provider.
Information exchange, Girl Talk, Powder Room, etc would be most effective if each customer had a fixed identity to prevent multiple references to JoeBigDick, Joe_Big_Dick, Joe's Big Dick, Joe Dick, etc that would happen with each provider creating her own note. The systems fix for that would be what we've been calling a "profile" that the ladies could attach comments to, much in the same way on Eccie, a Verified Provider gets the reviews attached. Imagine the effectiveness of comments or queries of a provider that started with selecting her "profile" from a drop list, before proceeding. Everything available on the board relevant to that provider would immediately be gathered for your research.
As the board moderator, if I assume an extremely high likelihood that active Eccie members would also be customers of the providers on my site, I might preemptively create profiles for the Providers to select from when they share with the other providers. I could probably assume that with xx number of reviews and posts, and no other noise on the board about them, that we could leverage that for screening purposes. Thus I might have ready "profiles" created for the most likely customers, further enhancing my site's value to my customer... the provider. That could explain "profiles" existing but not viewable outside the secured areas.
From an in-call perspective, I am sure my clients (providers) would value a location that was upscale, good parking, enough traffic that customer's don't stand out, and a demographic that doesn't make a very hot, well dressed, sexy lady stand out too much. The Domain is perfect. She would also probably value a location that would allow her to see arriving customers, make sure they were alone, fit the description of her screening data, and wasn't coordinating anything with guys in blacked out suburbans. I don't think I understand an issue with being observed before I enter the in-call. I have had several providers watch me, giving me navigation instructions to the unit via phone (Turn left now, ok, just go straight from there and I'll meet you at the door.)
So some of this I could understand, if this were the case. But, not being upfront about being a booking agent and having bogus ads with bogus contact info is inexcusable, but correctable. Regarding Neighborhood Watch, even Eccie requires we post Alerts in public whereupon the party alleged can be aware and refute the allegation. What is the purpose of having an 'alert' on a client visible, but not letting the client know what it says, or giving equal time for a rebuttal. If that is the case, then don't make the list public. Keep it in the providers secured area. Avoid the drama.
Klovve's timing for posting her comments raises an eyebrow, but her points are valid. We're worried about Marco collecting data? Google, Yahoo, ISP's, etc gather way more data and details than Marco ever could. Think it is lost in the big picture as just more noise? Think again. Google complies with
93% of all Government requests for user and usage information. Every post, every provider ad, every handle, every IP used is available to an investigator. If it traveled the internet, passed through a server anywhere, it is recorded and will never go away. What's he gonna do, describe me as a fat old biker, white, no tats, etc?? Gee, that really calls me out. Not many of those around.