There's a number of other metrics to use to judge a webpage's reliability than using the WoT, unless you'd like to support a commercial entity that accrues revenue by violating users' trust.
http://lifehacker.com/web-of-trust-sells-your-browsing-history-uninstall-it-1788667989
A few ideas might include using Moz's MozRank service, verifying an SSL cert, and checking the age of a domain in its WHOIS record to judge the reliability of a webpage and its content. I'd be happy to provide a fork demonstrating an example of how this may be equally as effective and not half as morally dubious.
There's a number of other metrics to use to judge a webpage's reliability than using the WoT, unless you'd like to support a commercial entity that accrues revenue by violating users' trust.
http://lifehacker.com/web-of-trust-sells-your-browsing-history-uninstall-it-1788667989
A few ideas might include using Moz's MozRank service, verifying an SSL cert, and checking the age of a domain in its WHOIS record to judge the reliability of a webpage and its content. I'd be happy to provide a fork demonstrating an example of how this may be equally as effective and not half as morally dubious.