Fox Directory Suggests a New Google Page Rank Standard in American Internet Usage

HOUSTON, April 23, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Fox Directory, the human-reviewed web directory and professional website showcase that puts forward a conservative economic argument of international monetary reform to help create jobs in the American workplace, and in the process meticulously profiles businesses from educational toys to chess and even political movements in the wake of the 2012 U.S. presidential election cycle, has begun IT operations again after 7 years to develop how page rank, the web standard pioneered by Google, should be used to interpret online content in the digital era.

Responding to the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) debate, Fox Directory seeks to broaden a discussion about the separation of powers operating outside Washington and outside the Constitution's tripartite structure, arguing that only when the adjudicatory executive role is completely segregated from the Congress there will exist enough tangible economic restructuring, especially in light of the SOPA act and 2008 government bailouts that nationalized mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and section U.S.C 254(b) (2000), and our U.S. system of democratic governance, and financial policymaking, which are uncomfortably devolved to individual state legislatures, will be accountable enough to the American people as a political entity.

After examining the derisively monopolistic, and it would be fair to say plutocratic, marketplace environment in which many of Google's regulations were adopted (according to scholarly articles on Foxdirectory.com) in response to U.S. anti-trust laws and the electronic media, Fox Directory contends that essentially the same First Amendment protection accorded to the print media, such as The New York Times and Forbes Magazine, should be afforded in the calculation of Google Page Rank for website directories, online information groups like Wikipedia, and the majority of American electronic interests operating on commercial servers.

With the dominance of China beginning to take hold in the online community, as demonstrated elegantly by national commentator Randolph J. May's A Call For A Radical New Communications Policy (Schiel & Denver Book Publishers and Christian Book Publishers, 2011), the public interest by which private media bodies like the Fox Web Directory rely on Google for effectual page rank standards, merits continued scrutiny, Fox Directory further contends.

The existing regulatory framework that is necessarily implicated in the Internet telephony or Voice over Internet Protocol ("VoIP") has become functionally problematic, in conjunction with U.S. government legislation that is being reacted to by SOPA critics. Although the CompuServe/Netscape telecommunications access to broadband networks across discrete techno-functional boundaries helped define high speed Digital Subscriber Line ("DSL") Internet access, it was at the expense of freedom of speech, says Fox Directory.

Fox Directory is a leading, auspicious directory of carefully selected websites and eBook portals, offering a paid review service from $35 for 10 full years of directory access to the FoxDirectory.com Domain. Learn more at: http://www.foxdirectory.com and http://www.foxdirectory.com/showcase

Distributed by: Fox Money and Fox Search Blog available at http://money.foxdirectory.com/ and http://search.foxdirectory.com/

Contact:

Simon Hornby
Schiel & Denver Book Publishers
http://www.schieldenver.com
Tel: 888-629-4449

This press release was issued through eReleases(R).  For more information, visit eReleases Press Release Distribution at http://www.ereleases.com.

SOURCE Fox Directory

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