Proof of Usefulness Report

Lidnug

Analysis completed on 2/8/2026

+12
Proof of Usefulness Score
You're In Business

The submission describes a legitimate historical .NET user group (Lidnug, est. 2007) but is marred by significant red flags indicating a low-quality or bot-generated entry. The submitter name ('DeepShade') matches an unrelated academic AI project, and the traction claims ('most people have used my product', 'marketcap: 2500000') are factually false or nonsensical for a community group. The description is copy-pasted from outdated ~2017 text, and there is no evidence of current activity or technical innovation.

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Score Breakdown

Real World Utility+6.00
Audience Reach Impact+2.00
Technical Innovation+0.38
Evidence Of Traction+1.25
Market Timing Relevance+0.50
Functional Completeness+0.25
Subtotal+10.38
Usefulness Multiplierx1.15
Final Score+12

Project Details

Project URL
Description
The group was originally formed in 2007 by "Inbar Gazit" after leaving a position as a senior program manager working on the C# CLR team based out of Microsoft at seattle in the U.S.A Inbar started the group (Originally called "C# Proffessionals") in order to meet and network with other C# developers, and get to know other developers in the C# community. In early 2009 Inbar met and teamed up with then microsoft developer evangelist "Zain Naboulsi" and "Charles Cozad" from intel. A few months later, "Brian H Madsen" (A .Net MVP) working for fujitsu in Australia joined the team, and together they renamed the group "The Linked.NET users group". After a short while, and after repetitive use of "LiDNUG" as a shortened term of the full group name, "LiDNUG" as a name started to stick, and as the Linked-In groups platform started to grow, and members started to join the group, "LiDNUG" soon became the groups official name. In early 2010 with memebership numbers rising and a healthy community of many discussions the group started to do regular online live webinarpresentations for it's members. Chief among these was none other than .NET legend "Scott 'The Gu' Guthrie" credited with the invention of the original .NET framework. As numbers grew, and presentations (and presenters) multiplied, it was obvious that extra staff where needed to keep things running smoothly. In mid 2010, 2 new faces "Asit Aithal" and "Peter Shaw" showed up in the group. Beacuse of the skills and knowledge of the I.T and .NET tools they had available to them, they quickly started to help out in the group, answering questions, fostering and helping to grow various discussions, something that didn't go un-noticed by the current team, a few months later Asit and Peter were asked if they wanted to join the managment team and help run the group.

Algorithm Insights

Market Position
Growing utility with room for optimization
User Engagement
Documented reach suggests active user community
Technical Stack
Modern tech stack aligned with sponsor technologies

Recommendations to Increase Usefulness Score

Document User Growth

Provide specific metrics on user acquisition and retention rates

Showcase Revenue Model

Detail sustainable monetization strategy and current revenue streams

Expand Evidence Base

Include testimonials, case studies, and third-party validation

Technical Roadmap

Share development milestones and feature completion timeline