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Where's George?

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Drhaggis (talk | contribs) at 04:20, 4 May 2004 (added link to currency tracking). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Where's George?, commonly abbreviated as WG, is a website that tracks American paper money — most commonly one-dollar bills, but also higher denominations. "Where's George" is free, supported by advertising, sales of T-shirts and other memorabilia, and by users who pay a fee for extra features. The name George refers to George Washington, whose portrait appears on the $1 bill.

The free site, established in 1998 by Hank Eskin, a computer consultant in Brookline, Massachusetts, allows people to enter their local ZIP code and the serial and series of any United States denomination up to $100 they want to track. Once a bill is registered, the site reports the time between sightings, the distance traveled and any comments from the finders, and anyone who registered the bill earlier learns about it by e-mail and/or text messaging.

To increase the chance of having a bill reported, users (called "Georgers") write or stamp text on the bills encouraging bill finders to visit www.wheresgeorge.com and track the bill's travels.

Other currency tracking websites have been started including Where's Willy?, a "Where's George" spinoff for Canadian currency, and eurobilltracker, which launched shortly before the Eurobill was officially released. "Where's George" was also the inspiration for the popular BookCrossing website.

Although "Where's George" doesn't officially recognize the bills that travel the farthest or fastest, some have approached it as a semi-serious way to track patterns in the flow of American cash.

Where's George and geocaching

The phenomenon of geocaching, in which small items are left in obscure places for others to find using GPS systems, has resulted in a problem. Some geocachers leave Where's George bills, but this can make it too easy for friends or family members to find the bills, artificially inflating the number of hits for that bill and disrupting the intent of Where's George, which is to track money's natural path.

The Where's George web site says it "prohibits trading or exchanging bills with friends, family or anyone known to the bill distributor. This rule is to encourage 'natural circulation' of the currency, and to prevent multiple 'fake hits' from happening on any bill." As a result, as of 2004, the site has dropped a separate listing of "Top 10 Geocache bills" and is cautioning that if geocache sites are used too often, "all Geocache bills will be removed from this site." Where's George description of problem