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Tuesday 26 June 2012

Notehall

Notehall is an online marketplace in which college students can buy and sell class notes.[1] Notehall gained recognition after appearing on the ABC reality show Shark Tank in October 2009. It has since been purchased by Chegg.com, a textbook-rental company.
TypePrivate
IndustryElectronic Commerce
Founded2008
HeadquartersSan Francisco, CA
Key peopleSean Conway, Co-Founder and CEO
Justin Miller, Co-Founder and President
D.J. Stephan, CMO
Fadi Chalfoun, CTO
ProductsClassnotes
Websitehttp://www.notehall.com


History
Notehall was launched in 2008 at the University of Arizona by Sean Conway, Justin Miller, D.J. Stephan and Fadi Chalfoon. Within 8 months, 40% of the students at the University of Arizona were using Notehall.[2] By November 2008, the student government at the University of Arizona was considering a partnership with Notehall. [3] In October 2009, Notehall appeared on the ABC reality show Shark Tank where they were successful in landing a $90,000 offer from Barbara Corcoran.[4] However, Notehall decided to take a different investment. In 2009, Notehall participated in DreamIt Ventures, where it received another investment.[citation needed]

Concept
Students who are looking to sell class notes, outlines, or study guides can upload documents to Notehall in order to make them available to their classmates. Students looking to purchase documents can buy credits from the website which can be used to view the documents. Notehall takes 50% of the sales of any notes.

Notehall in the news
Notehall.com has been in the news on Wall Street Journal, Forbes.com, Business Week, Yahoo, US News, Techcrunch etc. The Co-founders of Notehall were nominated as the 2009 Finalists: America's Best Young Entrepreneurs on Business_Week.[5] Yahoo Finance also selected Notehall's Co-Founders in the 2009 edition of America's Best Young Entrepreneurs.[6] Notehall was one of the six firms in Forbes' Selling Strategies: Six New Ways To Make Money Online.[7] US News ranked Notehall as one of the five must-have Social Media Tools for College Students.[8] Sean Conway, the Co-Founder and CEO of Notehall, Inc. was featured on the Wall Street Journal for being creative in getting funding during the economic recession.[9] DreamIT ventures introduced Notehall.com to the media through an article in Techcrunch during August 2009.[10]

Criticism
The practice of buying and selling course notes in sites such as Notehall (and competitors such as Course Hero) has been criticised by university officials and faculty members. In California, Mark Cioc, Interim Vice Provost and Dean of Undergraduate Education at the University of California Santa Cruz, sent a letter to all faculty members and undergraduates alerting them that the commercialization of class notes is illegal in California.[11][12][13] Cioc went so far as to refer to note selling sites as "devious," and the UCSC general counsel has sent "cease and desist" letters to Notehall and CourseHero.
Individual faculty members have also expressed concerns that the selling of notes based on their lectures and courses could violate their intellectual property rights. Illinois Institute of Technology employee and former DePaul faculty member Gina Mieszczak said, “If I put the time and effort into developing a brief summary of a class I was teaching or a particular lesson, I would be extremely disappointed if it were put on the Internet and people were making a profit off of it, especially without my permission.”[14] University of Manitoba faculty member Brad MacKenzie argued, “In my view, these kinds of postings, not only violate intellectual priority laws, but are unethical in the way that they take what is private information and post them in a public domain."[15] As the Colorado State University guide to Notehall, Course Hero, and Koofers explains, "Uploading an instructor's work product is a copyright violation issue. Examples are a PowerPoint presentation or study guide prepared by the instructor, even if it has been distributed to the class. Students may not profit from another's work."[16] Finally, Indiana University-Bloomington professor Edward Castronova notes that this sort of commercialization of classroom note taking can easily become a black market (just as gold farming has in online games): "How long before we have 'note farmers' - people who go to class just to take notes and sell them?"[17]

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