Readers of whoisdoctorwho.co.uk

Clive Finch identified the people following his conspiracy website as his "faithful readers". (PROSE: Rose) Clive, (PROSE: Have You Seen This Man?) and later Mickey Smith and David Roberts, (PROSE: Dummy Massacre, Who Am I?, Lights In The Sky) asked upon the readers of whoisdoctorwho.co.uk to fulfil certain requests, such as submitting their anecdotes of meeting the Doctor. (PROSE: Have You Seen This Man?, Rose)

Readers
Some of the more notable readers of whoisdoctorwho.co.uk included: A. Fergus, Peri Brown, Arthur Dent, Mr Yates, Sarah Jane Smith, (PROSE: Have You Seen This Man?) and Rose Tyler. (TV: Rose, PROSE: Rose) There were also hundreds of other readers. (PROSE: Have You Seen This Man?, Mars, etc.)

History
By March 2005, Clive Finch asked his readers to send in their anecdotes about the Doctor to the site, although the exact details of the site varied between accounts. (PROSE: Have You Seen This Man?, Rose) Clive got hundreds of responses, which he posted onto the site. (PROSE: Have You Seen This Man?)

In late 2006, Mickey Smith told his readers to remember the truth about the alien attacks, the shop dummies and aliens invading London, until more news about the Guinevere probe was released on Christmas Day. (PROSE: Mars)

In 2007, the readers of the website were contacted by Ricky Smith, a native of Pete's World, instead of Mickey as usual, who told them they had to look on the Internet for a code to take down Cybus Industries. (WC: Secret Code) After going into a chatroom to speak with "ChatGuest1", the readers were sent across the Internet to find the correct code, going to websites belonging to International Electromatics, Cybus Industries, Cybus Fitness, Henrik & Son, and Millingdale. They eventually found the correct password, "binary9", after using the Cybus Industries Staff Intranet. (GAME: Cybus Spy)

Behind the scenes
The identities of the readers of whoisdoctorwho.co.uk were often real world users who submitted fictional accounts of meeting the Doctor to the site, where the flash fiction was officially approved by the BBC, and released as parts of stories such as Have You Seen This Man?. After these readers had been established, later stories on the website, especially after its redesign to Defending the Earth!, were asked by Mickey to go on digital missions, which were often represented by web games.