Now i understand what is being pointed out, no what i was replying to is: Bernard said Google is on a witch hunt to penalize paid links and people selling PR And im saying well if a directory/site/blog had no PR, then how can it be penalised for that reason? An example one of my own having no pr, being new, so it cant fall into the bin for the PR thing.
Posting your PR should be no problem. It's public information anyway, Google even has the PR showing in their own toolbar.
What I'm pointing out is that anyone who owns a paid directory and that is "flaunting" their PR score, is putting a big red target on their back that says "I'm selling PR". If you aren't selling PR, why the need to obsess over it endlessly? Why the need to advertise it? What are you guys going to do when Google removes the green bar from the toolbar altogether? There are other metrics for determining a directory's value. Please see the three topics I mentioned earlier for just a few ideas in that direction.
While i cant speak for the other guys here, im aware and have already seen a number of guys here beginning to forget about PR, not completely but like anything, it takes a while to leave something in the past, eventually many of them wont mention it in the near future so they prob wont give too much attention when google eventually does call it a day for obvious PR. I think a lot of people are already doing the positive things that your suggesting they should do, you have to remember that things take a while to change. I think many here do not bad at all at adapting, when in all honesty they dont have many hard facts to help them and just do their best to make a positive change. Because search engines are so often secretive, well at least not always helpfully open with assisting, or late in coming to the party with the laymans terms, it means that the webmaster can only guess or go on what they hear. If a search engine cant clear up some of the rumours for the many confused then it doesn't help the webmaster at all.
Be real folks, if you mention your site and PR in the same sentence why would anyone care other then to get juice from you. Saying anything different is simply disingenuous. Personally, I hope G does away with PR. They've created a big monster through a system that arbitrarily ranks a site's value. That PR1 site may be much more informative and useful than a PR7 site that simply has more money to chase PR and SEO. The PR1 site may be run by a hobbiest who doesn't know SEO from CEO and why should it truly matter in the first place when it comes to quality?
If posting your directory business, mentioning its PR for an advertising tool to be penalized, the Google employees must earn lot of money because they would have to spend time to read those posts and investigate each directory. I don't think that's what's going on on a regular basis.