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NAR is NOT listening, State Realtor Associations is NOT Listening,
Law Makers - Attorneys - Judges are Not Listening..
State Real Estate Boards Are NOT Listening...

Title Companies, Lawyers, Good Realtors ...
Can DO Nothing.. so Email ME
Crystal L. Cox Real Estate Whistleblower
and Get your Story Heard...
Expose Realtors on our
Real Estate Industry Whistleblower...
Tell your Story...

Crystal@CrystalCox.com

NAR - the Ultimate Wolf in Sheeps Clothing

NAR - the Ultimate Wolf in Sheeps Clothing
Time to Hold NAR Accountable
to Those Code of Ethics
that are Simply Gibberish
they make Newbies Swear to
But have No Intention
or System in Place to
Make this REALLY Happen.

Time For the Truth About
the National Association of Realtors.

the National Association of Realtors is a Hoax.

NAR is NOT of a "Higher Standard" as they Claim to Be.

NAR does not Provide Consumer Protection in ANY way.

The National Association of Realtors NEEDS

you to REALLY buy into the Illusion that they
are the "Voice of Real Estate"
that way you will Simply not know that you can use
a Real Estate Broker that is NOT Part of the
Real Estate Cartel known as
National Association of Realtors.

And You Believe that an NAR Member Offers you
More Protection in your Real Estate Transaction
When In Fact that is a Flat Out Lie.

NAR is so Engrained in your Life that ALL of you Use
the Word "Realtor" for the WordS "Real Estate Agent"
though NAR tells me that is Illegal. Law Books Do it, you Do it
But NAR wants to STOP me from Doing it.

The National Association of Realtors
Violates Anti-Trust Laws, Violates Mortgage Laws,
Violates RESPA Laws, they pay Attorneys to
Advise members at the State Association Level
that is Information Biased on What NAR Needs
to be the Course of Action, to Keep NAR in Business.

Even to the Point of Convincing Members they
are doing something Illegal when they try and
benefit the Real Estate Consumer.

NAR Pushes State Real Estate Governing Agencies
to Make E and O insurance Mandated -
when in FACT this E and O insurance is What Enables
the Realtor to Legally Committ Fraud and
there is nothing you Can do unless you have
BIG Money and a WHOLE lot of Years to Fight.

The National Association of Realtor IS NOT the
Voice Of Real Estate. NO WAY.


Who Will STOP the Real Estate Cartel Known as The National Association of Realtors....

Realtor Do NOT have the Right to Simply REMOVE the Competition...
Check out this Article.

The Real Estate 'Cartel' strikes again
MLS smacks down Maverick Website

It was an antidote to Toronto's sprawling housing market: a simple website created by two self-described "computer geeks" to ease their first home search, and then help a city of frazzled buyers. That is until this week, when the Multiple Listings Service - the reigning king of online real estate listings in Canada - unleashed its lawyer on housing123.com and banished the new kids on the block.

"It was always this overhanging axe that was ready to fall," said Travis Fielding, the 31-year-old co-founder of the website, which allowed users to search MLS listings plotted on a Google map of local neighbourhoods.

After all, MLS has crushed upstarts before. Two Toronto-based sites, Realtysellers Ltd. and Realestateplus.ca, were shut down in the past two years after run-ins with the Canadian Real Estate Association, which owns the MLS trademark. Housing123.com is accused of using its information without permission.

But some industry watchers say MLS may be losing this online turf war, as what's happening in the United States may soon happen here: Sites such as Redfin, Zillow and Yahoo Real Estate now carry the lion's share of new listings, while MLS is losing ground.

They say the MLS business model - giving people only a taste of a house and directing them to an agent for more - won't stand up against competitors that will give you every detail about a house and its surroundings, including local crime stats, school reviews and previous purchase prices, along with 360 tours and a break on the commission.

"They're basically saying, 'You know what? People want to search listings themselves,' " says John Pasalis, founder of Realosophy.com, a website that dishes details about Toronto and Greater Toronto Area neighbourhoods. "The problem in Canada is we can't do this because the real-estate boards don't allow us."

The idea for housing123.com bloomed a couple of years ago after Mr. Fielding's friend and fellow software developer, Kevin Lai, became frustrated with his own home search. Sick of navigating MLS, and frustrated by an agent who missed good houses, Mr. Lai thought he could design a better system.

On his laptop, he basically created what is known as a "Google-map mash-up," which allows people to plot customized data (in this case, MLS listings) on top of a Google map application.
It worked so well that, just for kicks, he enlisted Mr. Fielding to help him take it to the public. It took about three weeks to work out the kinks, and they developed a way for the program to automatically add new listings. "On a scale of 10, it's probably like six," Mr. Lai, 29, says of the difficulty level. For their day jobs, he and Mr. Fielding design software for financial companies.
Since the site was launched 10 months ago, it averaged about 400 to 500 unique users per day, Mr. Fielding says.

Users appreciated its simplicity. House listings appeared as dots on a map of Toronto, which users clicked on to take them to the MLS listing. Houses were colour-coded by price so users could see which areas were pricey or affordable.

By contrast, MLS has no way to narrow a search to a neighbourhood. If you're looking for a Victorian in Kensington Market, you have to search in zone C-01, which covers Yonge to Dufferin, and Bloor to the Lakefront. (That includes the Annex, the waterfront, Kensington, Little Italy, Trinity-Bellwoods, University, the downtown core, and others.)

The search engine spits out hundreds of listings, and users are stuck flipping between MLS and Mapquest.

Still, the housing123.com founders knew it would just be a matter of time before MLS came knocking, because they were using listings that were the property of MLS.ca.
Last week, Mr. Lai received a letter from a CREA lawyer saying they had violated copyright laws. Remove the site, it said, or we'll sue.

"They were scraping data from our website," says Calvin Lindberg, president of CREA, which represents more than 94,000 brokers and agents. "It's something that we deal with on a regular basis. ... Obviously whenever we see it happening, we send a letter asking them to turn it off."
Since the site folded on June 15, dozens of users have voiced their dismay on a blog, urging the duo to keep going or seek legal advice.

One user wrote: "MLS is brutal and your site made finding the right place in the RIGHT location a breeze."

By the end of the summer, MLS.ca will have a map component, Mr. Lindberg says. Beyond that, he says, the site does not need to be improved. "We've created a very effective and efficient system that the consumers love."

Others disagree. One simply has to look south to see the potential for informative sites, Mr. Pasalis says. Those sites, however, have only been made possible through tough legal battles. In May, the U.S. National Association of Realtors settled its antitrust case with the Department of Justice, giving online realtors - which have been offering fees that are significantly lower than traditional realtor rates - full access to the MLS database.

Mr. Pasalis says the onus should be on Canada's Competition Bureau, not individual entrepreneurs, to fight to ensure fair competition is allowed in Canada too.
For now, Mr. Lai and Mr. Fielding say they are dreaming up new projects. "At least we helped a lot of people find their dream home," said Mr. Lai, who is now in the market for a downtown condo.

The pair say they may revive their site, but only to post properties from individual sellers or brokers - not MLS. "We can't afford the lawsuit, that's for sure," Mr. Fielding says.
Sadly, very few consumers appreciate that the MLS monopoly on publishing online real estate listings in Canada keeps listings fees double what they would be if open competition were permitted.

Link to Article Below


Who Gave the Realtors the RIGHT to Simply STOP Healthy Competition ? Why Do Realtors Get to have a Monopoly on the Real Estate Industry. The MLS Monopoly that Realtors have is Wrong, UnEthical, and SHOULD certainly be Illegal...

But REALTOR members are International so the Reign of the Real Estate Cartel Known as The National Association of Realtor is Far Reaching and Seemingly unStoppable in the Name of Real Estate Consumer Protection and a "Higher Standard" which as a Real Estate Broker Owner, Ex-Realtor Member I can Tell You Honestly.. that is a Flat OUT Lie. NAR is NOT interested in Protecting the Real Estate Consumer. the National Association of Realtors DOES not hold Realtors accountable for their actions that Really Do Hurt the Real Estate Consumer. Realtor member are in NO WAY of a Higher Standard than a State Licensed Real Estate Broker that is NOT a Realtor, I Say Broker because agents DO NOT get a Choice.

NAR says that being a Realtor is Voluntary but it is only Voluntary for the Broker Owner, if they are REALTORS, NAR members then the agent who signs with them has to be also. And if the Broker Owner wants to do business in their area with other Realtors - and look at what they call "their data" then the Broker Owner do not have much of a choice either. If they do not join they will be boycotted and will not get those exclusive members rights....

How Does an Association with Supposed Voluntary Members have the Right to Shut Down Other Peoples Websites.. Take away the Livlihood of those Who Cannot Afford to Fight them ?

Other Sites..

www.CrystalCox.com

www.BrokersZone.com

Real Estate Whistleblower

www.BrokersConsultations.com

SavvyBroker.com

Crystal L. Cox
Real Estate Whistleblower

Consumer Advocate in Real Estate

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