Four Companies Get Half Your Clicks 193
AOL, Yahoo!, Microsoft, and Napster. These four "web properties"
account for
50 percent of the time people spend online.
Check out the trend: at the 60-percent level, the number of companies shrank from 110, two years ago, to fourteen today. Hello, I'm with Mergers & Acquisitions, can I borrow your mouse please?
Re:The thing is... (Score:1)
And the other 50%.... (Score:1)
Actually for me, it's more like 30% Slashdot, 70 percent pr0n.... but I'm talented.
Steve
Re:Not my clicks (Score:1)
So it's obviously masses of newbies and AOLers and MSNers generating all those useless clicks.
Not my clicks (Score:3)
Lying with statistics (Score:4)
The amount of clicks doesn't also equal the time spent on the pages. If I open www.microsoft.com and go have a cup of coffee and then click something, I have "been" on the page for an hour? Besides, doesn't it just tell that the pages are very BAD if I can't find anything from the labyrinth of www.microsoft.com and I just have to spend 3 hours and 700 clicks to find one single file?
The claim that those couple companies would get "that many surfers" is simply not true. I haven't seen anyone actually ever visit any of the company pages/services listed on the research. They have obviosly not reached all possible surfer groups, causing a severe disorientation in the survey data.
Sorry guys.. But forget the whole thing as fud/crap/whatever. Never mind. And the M$ (/Yahoo etc) pros stop cheering.
Re:It should be five for computer geeks. (Score:5)
When I die and go to heaven or hell the only thing I ask of you is you send the two previous posters to the other place.
Thank you.
VA? (Score:1)
Much better than the alternative... (Score:1)
Breathing a sigh of relief...
Why microsoft.com??? (Score:1)
I wonder why sites like Microsoft's get so many hits. Microsoft.com is a relatively boring functional software site, not a "portal" or some place where people would go for fun or for finding non-specific technical information. It's a huge site, with lots of changing information, links to the content die often, finding stuff is ocassinally tricky... I won't go there unless forced to or if I need to find some miracle cure for a MS product.
Or are they speaking of MSN, Microsoft's portal?
Yahoo! would qualify (portal / news / search engine / web directory / coffee maker), and other listed sites, but microsoft.com?
Re:Why microsoft.com??? (Score:1)
I guess the reason for these high numbers is simple: People don't change the default homepages, they just use what browser makers or their ISP recommends.
Half of all the time spent online? (Score:1)
That's pretty weird: I haven't been to *any* of 'em..
Guess there's still no accounting for tastes..
t_t_b
--
I think not; therefore I ain't®
Re:This shouldn't be too surprising (Score:2)
Include Macs and everything else, include the rest of the world, your 96% figure is considerably wrong.
So we go there.. but do we respond to the ads? (Score:2)
Re:Is this a suprise? (Score:2)
Considering that Yahoo uses Goole as their search engine for "Web page matches", Yahoo hits == Google hits.
- Sam
60% and holding (Score:1)
Re:And? (Score:1)
There's more than 14. Check out LWN [lwn.net]'s Linux Distributions [lwn.net] page for more info. Amongst those that you missed: Yellow Dog Linux, TurboLinux, Progeny, the Linux Router Project, etc...
Does cable count? What about satellite? How about radio stations? FM and AM?
Which is what? To become a monopoly and lock out the industry?
Re:My Mom... (Score:2)
--
Re:They do NOT. (Score:1)
... and where is Slashdot?! (Score:1)
Re:They do NOT. (Score:1)
Re:They do NOT. (Score:1)
And elsewhere is where I would be. I got the impression that the majority of rentals were requiring this information. I'm glad to see it was just one; and that single example probably paranoid to boot. I find the concept of a gated community somewhat unsettling anyways.
The problem is when one has no effective choice because certian behaviours have become the defacto standard in an area. I moved around a lot in college(11 times in 4 years), and it seemed every city had something wierd and wacky that was verboten. One town it was almost inpossible to find a place that didn't require a one year lease; and in another city forget getting a place that wasn't next to a toxic waste dump if you had an even slightly exotic pet (a ferret for example). I'm glad to see pre identification hasn't reached this point; at least in your area and mine.
This is kind of misleading... (Score:2)
Re:Is this a suprise? (Score:2)
Re:Is this a suprise? (Score:5)
Well, one thing that both MS and Yahoo! have in common is free email. Yahoo! (unlike google) also mirrors lots of content (news articles, weather, TV listings, maps, yellow pages, etc), so you can spend a good amount of time searching Yahoo! and never have to leave. With google, you type your search and off you go...
Hrmm.. geek links. (Score:2)
Re:Is this a suprise? (Score:1)
It has less to do with the rebellion level and more to do with how long it takes the pages to load, and how annoying they are once they've loaded. Google.com is still the best interface to the google search engine.
Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!
Re:The thing is... (Score:1)
You realize that that pre-installed OS isn't actually free, right? [/nitpick]
Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!
Re:lying about clicks.Re:Lying with statistics (Score:2)
Personally, I think that a web browser is the exact wrong interface for email. I'd rather use pine.
Re:Serious flaws in this article (Score:5)
I was also about to post a link to the report from Jupiter Media Metrix, but I am glad to see that someone else has done the same research. After a bit of URL-wrestling (removing some junk and user-tracking stuff), the direct link to the report is:r 010604 [jup.com].
http://www.jup.com/company/pressrelease.jsp?doc=p
Indeed, the most interesting part of this report (not mentioned in the article) is that AOL Time Warner gets almost one third of the total time spent online, mostly through e-mail and instant messaging. All other companies get less than 8% each. Outside the top 10, they get less than 0.5%.
This report measures the time spent looking at or using the web sites or applications (e-mail, messaging, ...) but does not say anything about the number of "clicks", number of advertisements seen, or total traffic. The time spent reading or composing e-mail messages should not be counted in the same way as the time spent looking at some web sites, because the user is focused on different things. Also, if two thirds of the time spent on AOL Time Warner comes from communication services, I expect that Microsoft gets a fair share of time from its MSN Hotmail service, but the report does not provide any details about this.
The other 50%... (Score:1)
-Chris
...More Powerful than Otto Preminger...
No they don't (Score:1)
I don't go to microsoft.com - too dangerous, too many trojans...
What is AOL? I thought it was a company that made shiny coasters?
Re:I must be weird (Score:1)
I personally think there's a quite a bit of "spyware" going on in IE, but I can't confirm it, and stuff like this doesn't make me feel more comfortable. I wonder if I were to setup a firewall and then read the logs to see just exactly where I connect to "unknowingly". A friend of mine has discovered that IE under Win2K server tries to reach various sites while he's not around that he frequents (page caching?).
my 2 pence.
Re:I must be weird (Score:1)
Sometimes I miss lynx.
I used to do desktop support for a large OEM. Here is what I view to be the typical internet user these days:
"My computer is broken and I want my money back!"
"Whoa, ma'am. Exactly what is going on?"
"It says "Password invalid!" It's broken, I want my money back!"
"Um, is this when you try to get on the internet?"
"It's when I try to use the internet it won't do anything but give me this error! It's broken! Give me a new computer or my money back!"
"Um, who is your service provider?"
"What's that? Is that the internet? I thought I was on the internet! Can't you see what I'm seeing on my screen!? I want my money back!"
"Okay okay, I'm trying to help, ma'am. What do you do when you get that error?"
"I click on this MSN butterfly."
"ANd then?"
"it asks me for my username and password."
"And what do you then?"
"I type in my name and a password, and it dials, and it says "Invalid password". It's broken! I want my money back!"
"Ma'am, ma'am. Have you registered with MSN yet? Have you spoken with them and recieved your username and password or anything like that?"
"No! They said this computer was internet ready and it's not! I can't get on the internet! Aren't I supposed to be on the internet? I want my money back!"
"Ma'am, before you can use the internet, you have to have an internet service provider. Think of it as before you can have cable TV, you have to contact the cable TV people, or if you want electricity, you have to contact the electricity company. They set up an account and hook you up, right?"
"Right.."
"So, there's nothing wrong with the computer, you just need to contact MSN and have them activate your account or whatever it is they do over there, and you'll be able to get on the internet.. I can even give you their number.."
"NO! I'm not calling anyone else! This is on my machine, therefore my machine is broken and YOU have to fix it! I want a supervisor and I want my money back!"
"Okay, please hold."
that's a greatly abridged version of the call. It took 30 minutes to get that far. Not a very nice experience.
Re:They do NOT. (Score:1)
Re:They do NOT. (Score:3)
Say you owned a diner or pinball alley or something like that. Say a bunch of well known thugs frequented your establishment. Even say that while they are there, they are well mannered and even pay for drinks. However, they sit in the back corner, planning their next hits, and other illegal deeds. Do you, as the establishment owner, have any moral obligation to turn them in? Or do you, as the establishment owner, have any moral obligation to ban them from said establishment?
If Napster wants to pretend that its users aren't trading illegal MP3's (indeed, wasn't that one of it's early "advertising" pushes? "You'll find everything you ever wanted on Napster" kinda attitude?), the fact is, people are. Millions of them, although the number has gone down due to the filtering and such. Honestly, I like it this way. I don't listen to "mainstream" music, anyway, and the stuff I listen to is usually rather obscure and I pretty much own the physical materials as well. For example, I have the It's A Small World punk compilation with a great Jawbreaker song on it, but having no working LP player, I can't rip it to MP3. However, I did find it on Napster, saving me the trouble. I personally don't know where Blake of Jawbreaker stands on trading his bands' MP3's around, but I hope that this falls under "fair use".
Basically, if Napster can't survive with the filters in place, with only independent and pro-napster music being traded over it's network, then it deserves to die. Period. If it requires pirating to justify itself and make the numbers it needs to keep investors happy, then it deserves to die. Period. I'm hoping that's there's enough interest in 'non-mainstream' music to support it, though.
Napster needs to forget about "swooning" Sony, BMI, etc. They won't be happy until they either a) shut Napster down or b) buy Napster outright (ala MP3.com). Napster needs to get back to the grassroots, where it began, and start talking with Merge, Touch and Go, SubPop, Fat Wreck Chords, Dischord and a myriad of other small, independent labels and get their support. When the artists that come from these smaller labels to majors are used to the idea of swapping songs on Napster, they will demand it when they "make it big." Think of it like getting used to an OS. UNIX made it big in the server room because the computer scientists used UNIX in college, it was what they knew. NT is making rather large inroads in middle-line corporations because it's what's on the desktop, it's what the support people know, and through generous college grants, more and more students are being exposed to it. So, we get the future music execs used to the idea of napster, we get the future "big name acts" used to napster, and hey, we might have a winner.
just a thought.
Re:lying about clicks.Re:Lying with statistics (Score:1)
Seems like its just one huge spamfest over there by now. Still, its sorta amazing how many servers theyre having to dedicate to the spammers, the millions of mail accounts to recieve the spam and the couple of dozens of actual users...
Free mailers (Score:3)
Why I visit Yahoo and MS (Score:2)
MS: Always visit it after I first get a new Mozilla installation set up, and use their search thingy for "Linux". I like skewing statistics
--
Aaron Sherman (ajs@ajs.com)
Re:If microsoft means www.microsoft.com then .. (Score:5)
And let's not diss Microsoft about their site because quite frankly, MSDN is one of the best tech documentation sites on the net! The MS knowledge base is also very good..
netizens (Score:2)
To my mind this is too bad. Shared cultural spaces are more precious than isolating commercial ones. The entertainment industry will not be satisfied with 50%, they want 100%. With content providers buying network pipes your corner of the Internet is not involiate.
Re:If microsoft means www.microsoft.com then .. (Score:2)
Re:lying about clicks.Re:Lying with statistics (Score:1)
And that is the problem - I would actually use it if I could check hotmail through POP but nooo - then I would miss all the ads. On the other hand, MS is more than happy to check my POP email for me.
similar problem with MSN (my girlfriend has it). She can check her mail through POP but only using SPA (Secure Password Authentication) which is only available through outlook and outlook express which means I can't use any client I choose. Isn't email supposed to be convenient? Or am I missing something. AOL, MSN, Hotmail - these are all more trouble than they are worth!
Re:And the other 50%.... (Score:1)
Steve
Microsoft numbers may be inflated (Score:2)
----------------------------
Re:Not fair "results" (Score:1)
Sounds like a surefire way to cut into their luser count...
Re:I must be weird (Score:2)
Mine came back with Squid's 404 page.
It would appear that using a proxy server also bypasses this misfeature, as when I checked my settings, nothing was selected.
Re:what does 4 sites really mean? (Score:2)
Not at all since they got taken over by AOHell. Even before that, I usually went elsewhere for news (typically MSNBC, NYT, and/or Fox) because Ted Turner is a pinko bastard. About the only time I ever went to CNN was if /. linked to it. Now I don't even do that (gotta check those links to make sure you're not being sent to CNN or to goatse.cx).
Re:I must be weird (Score:2)
You can deactivate this (mis-)feature under Internet_Options -> Advanced -> Search from the Address bar -> (Radio Button) "Do not search from the Address bar".
Of course, 99% of people don't do that, because it's the default, as are things like "Browsing -> Automatically check for IE updates" and "Enable Install On Demand" (which just sounds like an accident waiting to happen).
Back on topic, these sites get so much traffic because they're the default home pages. If users are too dumb to change the default home page (and I've seen usability studies that show many users don't even know the default home page can be changed - they think of the default home page as "The Internet"), they're too dumb to secure themselves against stuff like this.
This isn't an anti-M$ rant. Nutscrape blows hot donkey meat when it does the same thing with "What's Related".
For lack of a better term, I call it "stealth spyware".
I wonder.... (Score:2)
Re:The thing is... (Score:3)
I am constantly getting word documents emailed to me that contain a few lines of text (some from Sun distrubuters!) I use Solaris, i dont want to receive text in doc format, i certainly dont want to receive it through email (look at the size difference between doc and ascii files).
I choose not to use Microsoft products, the trouble is I get forced into a situation where I HAVE to. (Word, IE (web sites being specifically written to chuck out browsers that are non-MS (there is no reason for this other than market dominance goals))).
As for MS products being better than the competition, personally I think not. BUT that is a personal opinion, based on my own preferences.
M.
It should be five for computer geeks. (Score:2)
They do NOT. (Score:2)
Napster does NOT "give away something you should be paying for". They do NOT provide MP3s. Yes, I agree that most people see it that way but I haven't seen a single server providing MP3s that is operated by Napster.
What they do is provide peer to peer networking for their customers. What you use that for is your problem. If 90% of Napsters customers use it to trade illegal warez (and I do understand that musicians want to be paid for their work), that's their customers' problem, isn't it?
(I still don't understand why the RIAA doesn't encourage the police to shut down all supermarkets. It would only be logical, because most of then sell e.g. kitchen knives. And I don't know if you realized that, but you can commit illegal, even brutal acts with kitchen knives. Just as you can commit illegal acts when you use the Napster network.)
Does this surprise anyone? (Score:3)
Really, does it? The huge expansion in connectivity, while it has certainly benefited some geeks, has mostly been in hooking up joe blow and jane gno. These are people that were really ok with television, but now that the internet is trendy they have to get onboard. Naturally they gravitate to sites that mimic television, that make things simple, etc etc. And naturally, for that crowd, there can only be a few sites at a time that are popular.
This is nothing to be either surprised or alarmed at. As long as these people and the companies they support don't change the basic structure of the internet, we can coexist. Vigilance is called for, but no less so than yesterday. Watch ICANN, watch ".net" and "hailstorm" and raise the most unholy rucous ever seen when necessary to defend that structure, for certain. But don't panic on this "news." It is, sadly, a given.
"That old saw about the early bird just goes to show that the worm should have stayed in bed."
If microsoft means www.microsoft.com then .. (Score:5)
--
Napster schmapster, give me morpheus (Score:2)
Re:Is this a suprise? (Score:2)
Nate
Technical Users matter a LOT (Score:2)
Technical people make lots of decisions about spending for computer companies. Those company's all use to Internet heavily.
We matter, we just matter differently. If you are selling servers, you'll pay a premium to hit us.
General people don't matter as much. Only large companies competing in LARGE oligopoly markets try to hit generic users. That's why events like the olympics and the superbowl (which hit everyone) get lots of ads from companies like Coke and Pepsi, McDonalds and Burger King, etc.
If you don't have a generic market, you want to hit your target. Targetted advertising is more difficult, and you pay a premium.
Microsoft may have more viewers, and that helps them sell ads to generic companies. However, I guarantee that Compaq is willing to pay a premium to put ads for its high end boxes in front of computer people above and beyond what Coke and Wendy's are willing to pay Microsoft.
Alex
I'm not convinced that there was magic... (Score:2)
I think that the biggest problem right now isn't the lack of hobby sites, it is the lack of linking. The reason that the search engines are having trouble in part is that people don't get link.
I've been interviewed in eWeek a few times, and my company's name is mentioned. However, it isn't linked. Obviously an interested reader can figure out our domain name, but it is still inappropriate to not provide that linking. Without linking, search engines can't figure out what is going on.
Get the linking back, and the Internet becomes infinitely more useful for information again.
Alex
Today's youth is different (Score:4)
When I was 17, the people coming onto my favorite multiline BBS were the more general public. Their parents had bought a new computer, and a modem happened to be in the machine. They got the number from a friend, and never ventured. At one point I called 10-15 boards, by the end I was down to 2 or 3. They never called more than 1.
Now, my girlfriend's kid sister (15) is online. Her family uses AOL because it's easy. She spends ALL her time in AOL things and Yahoo. She plays Yahoo games, hangs out in Yahoo chats, etc.
She isn't stupid, but Yahoo and AOL satisfy her needs. She doesn't feel the need to venture out. If she is interested in a piece of information (which the web is good for), she can search for it. But random cult sites aren't getting found anymore.
Hell, my personal viewing has dropped from HOURS surfing around following links 4 years ago to 6 or 7 news websites. I don't good off on the Net (outside of Slashdot).
Quite frankly, with the money that was in the Internet for a few years, people built up. Also, if you are an executive at Yahoo and saw something on a hobby site that you thought was cool, wouldn't you have your staff build it in a few weeks. If the page owner was a killer hacker and knocked it off in 2 days, wouldn't it be likely that Yahoo could reimplement it in 2 weeks or 2 months?
There is LESS compelling reasons to venture around on the Internet. You used to need to go to random places for things. Those of us that used Yahoo by '96 (when I did briefly) found a need to go elsewhere... The old-timers from earlier USED Yahoo to go elsewhere. Now, Yahoo provides lots of resources, instead of just information about what else is there.
I'm not convinced that younger people will change this. They may go out and explore, but there is less and less compelling outside the big boys. There used to be neat games that could only be found elsewhere, but they were all bought up by big sites.
For information, people will still do searches. However, the Web as a leisure activity will likely outnumber the web as a research tool for a LONG time.
Alex
Skew the next lot of stats (Score:2)
These stats are presented in a way to make the big companies feel good (not really taking account of people like me who tend to browse several sites simultneously in seperate windows cos of crappy d/l speeds), so I think it's time to harness the Slashdot Effect to screw up the next set of stats. Suggestions for sites that could use the publicity anyone?
Personally, my vote's for.....
Re:Is this a suprise? (Score:4)
--
$HOME is where the
Re:If microsoft means www.microsoft.com then .. (Score:2)
Re:So what... the "cool" internet is still there.. (Score:2)
Ah well... maybe it's also just sour grapes... maybe I'm just bitching because the once super-cool world of computers and the 'net has now been "invaded" by the mainstream and now it doesn't feel special or different anymore?
I guess this happens to most little sub-cultures... like rock-and-roll... "raves"... even sports... they just get kinda commericialized and absorbed. They can still live on though, no matter how fucked-up and corporate large parts of them become. No matter how many albums NSync sells, rock and roll is far from dead. I guess that's how the spirit of the 'net will have to be... (did that analogy make any sense to anyone but me??!)
http://www.bootyproject.org [bootyproject.org]
So what... the "cool" internet is still there... (Score:5)
Around 1995 is when I disovered the internet I thought it was the coolest thing I'd ever seen. A place where people could share ideas and information that was centered around the world, a place where anyone could be a publisher. Best of all, it wasn't tainted by big stupid money and advertisements. It was just like... a cerebral connection between people with similar interests or that just wanted to share information.
Then the web got all commercial. Nowadays it's a freaking ad-fest. Most major sites are whored out to major corporations at least to some extent. Which really depressed me for a long time. I watched the internet being ruined by commercialism.
The really sad part is that the average Joe on the street has already become dissillusioned about the internet. People are actually turning AWAY from the internet at this point. Do you know how many 30 and 40-somethings I know that have "tried" the Internet and found it stupid? To them, the internet is AOL or MSN. Just more chances to have their eyeballs spammed with ads and do a little shopping- in other words, just like the rest of our capitalist world except less convenient to use (compared with TV or opening up a magazine). In their eyes... the internet is absolutely nothing special... basically just TV, with hyperlinks, and added technical annoyances. Plus everyone's sick of hearing about the dot-com thing, which is a huge turn-off. They don't know or care about the rest of the internet, the real communities of people and the intellectual potential out there...
Which sucks, obviously. But then I realized... the cool part of the internet is still THERE! All that commerical bullshit floating on the surface doesn't prevent people from using the internet the way it was meant to be used... for sharing information and ideas and fun, not a fucking online version of tabloid magazines and shopping malls (not that buying things online isn't cool).
In fact... I realized it's all the money coming in from mass media that's actually helping the cool part of the net... paying for more bandwidth, driving the PC pricewars, etc.
So what I'm saying is, while it sucks that 50% of the clicks are concentrated on such a small number of huge-corporate-monolith sites... but you know what... fuck those people who are supplying those clicks. They're the stupid, mass-media brainwashed masses... not the type you really WANT contributing to Slashdot... or any other worthwhile online (or offline) endeavor. Let's just be glad their dollars are helping to fund things like broadband access and so on. We can still use the internet how it was meant to be used.
(Of course... we still need to be vigilant. The money pouring in from the corporate whores could have a polluting effect on the "cool" parts of the internet, too... witness things like the DCMA... etc..)
http://www.bootyproject.org [bootyproject.org]
Re-read the article (Score:2)
In the article they said that four companies, AOL, M$, Yahoo!, and Napster account for half the internet traffic. Everybody here is assuming that the article meant aol.com, microsoft.com, yahoo.com, and (I guess) napster.com. However, if you consider just the various other sites owned and ran by these companies, I can very well see where these statistics could be true.
AOL: Although I almost never go to AOL's main site (except for the occasional use of AIM Express) I do spend a lot of time at cnn.com, which is owned by AOL-Time Warner. Hell, I spend as much time at CNN as I do at /. and it's my homepage. But, if you conisder the vast numbers of AOL users who probably do have aol.com as their homepage, you can see where a lot of the web time comes from. Also, conisder some of the other sites ran by AOL. They own netscape.com, which just happens to be the default start page for Netscape browsers. Also, you can't discount the fact that netscape.com has been turned into the "convienient" (for the internet impaired, anyway) web portal. AOL also owns the two most popular instant messaging clients on the internet: AIM and ICQ. I'd put money that the corresponding web sites are visited fairly often.
Microsoft: Although I'll agree that microsoft.com sucks big donkey balls (I still can't find the software to my intellimouse there) the biggest site for microsoft is possibly hotmail.com. It is the largest web based email site on the internet. I have a hotmail address and I visit their site several times a day to check my email. However, they too probably fall under the "default home page" category, with msn.com. But, hell I even spend time at the MSN gaming zone as I have gotten hooked on Bejewled lately. And, you can't discount the portal factor for those who don't like to (or don't know how to) type in URL's.
Yahoo!: I actually wouldn't be surprised if yahoo.com accounted for a lot of Yahoo!'s web traffic. It was one of the first and most popular web portals. And, I believe that it still is one of the most popular. It's more than just a search engine these days. It's your "gateway to the rest of the internet." They offer their own classified listings, their own very popular web-based email system, their popular system of chat rooms, and their popular online gaming section. Although, I prefer google for searching, the average web user is probably just content with yahoo.com, who liscenses Google's search engine, by the way. Furthermore, you can't discount some of Yahoo!'s attempts to break into other markets with thing like their Yahoo! branded "internet keyboards." Like the hardware or not, that's still some free publicity. Lastly, when it comes to Yahoo!, you cannot forget that they own geoshit^H^H^H^Hcities.com: the web's largest and one of the web's oldest providers of free web space. Geocities probably generates at least 1/3 of Yahoo!'s portion of the time spent online pie.
Finally, Napster: I am a little surprised that Napster's web site would account for much of the intenet traffic. It's just the site you go to when you want to download the Napster client. However, once one takes in to account that the latest versions of the Napster client all connect to Napster's site to download the html content that you see when you log on, I'm no longer surprised. With the number of people out there using Napster, that's a hell of a lot of hits.
So, in conclusion I wish everybody here would just RTFA (read the f***in' article). They never once said that aol.com, microsoft.com, yahoo.com, and napster.com specifically got all the traffic. Only that those four companies could account for 40% of the traffic. Furthermore, we must realize that we as geeks, are in the minority of the web users and as such, do not visit the same sites that the average computer illiterate internet user visits. In such a light, these statistics aren't surprising at all.
--------------------------------------
Re:Actually (Score:2)
If you change that to Blockstackers, then it is well over half. It is more everything2.com these days then Slashdot, though.
Re:I must be weird (Score:2)
While there is no reason to be on the main AOL page, if you are skipping out on all MS and Yahoo pages, you are either ignorant or know way more then I do.
I suppose the only MS page that I ever use is Hotmail. But Yahoo has lots of great stuff...google, maps, yahoo mail, the entire newsgroup archive. I suppose for the super-31337, going to one central place to get all these things instead of knowing super-specialized sites for all of them is l4m3, but yahoo works rather well for me for these things.
The web is perhaps 8 years old (Score:2)
These people don't read somethingawful.com every day. They don't even know what you mean when you say "webcomics". They read dead-tree news and complain about the text on their 15" monitor. They print EVERYTHING.
Given time, though, there's a new generation coming up for whom the web is a second home. Give them another 5 years and we'll see the balance of clicks changing. Of course, older people may not ever really change their habits, but those of us who use the web a lot are responsible for many more pageviews per capita. The only reason we might find this article surprising is because we have gotten used to everything moving at internet speed that we've forgotten that people still move at people speed.
Puh-leaze! (Score:2)
1.) http://www.goatse.cx [goatse.cx]
2.) http://www.memepool.com [memepool.com]
3.) the refresh button while I'm at Slashdot [slashdot.org]
Re:M$ gets all my clicks (Score:2)
Don't. In order to get POP3 access, you have to opt-in to their "Bulk-Mail" (read: SPAM) program. I would't mind if it was one or even two emails a day, but I was getting 5-10 junk mailings a day. And they all come from different addresses, so they couldn't be filtered reliably...
Just a thought...
I must be weird (Score:2)
I've never knowingly been on an AOL page, I've been on MS about 3 times per year, Napster once (just long enough to confirm that, yes, it was an on-line fence for stolen goods), and I left Yahoo behind about three years ago.
MS and AOL I can understand since they're default homepages for people who don't know what a URL is, but the other two are hard to believe.
TWW
Re:I must be weird (Score:4)
Copying is not stealing. Copying something you don't own and don't have permission to copy is stealing.
The problem with theives like Napster is that they make it harder for the rest of us that want "fair use" to continue to exist in the digital age. By blatantly ignoring copyright they make it easier to justify "tightening up" the law.
TWW
we may be missing the point (Score:2)
Most
-Nut
ps. can anyone remeber which uni had thier coke machine hooked up to the net so you could find out the number of cans in it at any time?
Re:They do NOT. (Score:2)
I can't help but extend your already great analogy to cover the incident (9 months ago or so?) where a list of users who were sharing Metallica mp3s was presented to Napster.
Let's say that a collection of local business owners complain to the restaurant owner about a specific list of hoodlums who've been using the restaurant to discuss extortion plans. The restaurant owner then proceeds to ban everyone one that list from the restaurant. However, the restaurant owner then allows back in the restaurant anyone who signs a statement ("I promise I'm not discussing extortion in the back of your restaurant.") or anyone who makes even the most superficial pretenses at pretending to be someone else ("I'm not Bob. I'm his evil twin, Ted. See? I've got this realistic looking mustache.").
Personally, I think it'd help to have some sort of standardized identification system on the Internet, as a means of allowing service providers a way of placing legal responsibility back on the party in question. I'm not talking about a constant, Big Brotherian identification scheme, but rather something where a service provider can request your identity and you can conclusively provide it. For example, when I went apartment hunting, a number of places wanted to view my driver's license, so they knew who they were showing apartments to. If I later went nuts and started urinating on the floor or something, they knew who I was. If I was concerned about my privacy, I had the option of not giving them my driver's license. However, they would've then invoked their option of not showing me the apartment. In online realms, on the other hand, identity confirmation tends to rest on email address confirmation -- a scheme which fails when you realize that anyone capable of typing "hotmail.com" into a web browser can make as many throw-away email addresses as they want. It's not anonymous enough for doing something that would get you major attention (like threatening the president), but when you're one of thousands (hundreds of thousands? millions?) engaging in lesser offenses, the cost of tracking the user becomes prohibitive.
On the other hand, to deflate my own scheme before it's even started, given how pervasive all the various Windows-based email worms are, would it really take that long before someone created an identity-theft worm?
Re:They do NOT. (Score:2)
It was a gated community in Miami, Florida. Given that you don't generally anonymously rent apartments, anyway, I wasn't particularly upset at them wanting to know who I was. It was certainly less annoying, to me at least, than Radio Shack asking for my phone number because I've bought some batteries.
As for the implications of this being a police state, we're talking about a private organization stipulating lack-of-anonymity as one of the pre-qualifying conditions for an economic transaction. Such actions would be considered acceptable even in a purely libertarian society -- if you dislike them, you take your money elsewhere.
Top Ten reasons why... (Score:5)
2. Because only REAL MEN type the URL...
3. They don't want to read the whole article either, like us slashdotters.
4. They're looking for the "BillG ate my balls" links.
5. They have to find out why their win 9x box just died.
6. No one else has that useless I-Greeting thing.
7. It's their cover page for surfing slashdot at work.
8. They want to know if that email about getting money for forwarding it is REALLY true.
9. They already sent the email, and are trying to find out where their checks are.
10. That's where the best Pr0n is, man!
krystal_blade
How reliable are such 'reports'? (Score:2)
Is this a suprise? (Score:4)
That said, I'm suprised Yahoo! is so popular. And that Google isn't.
Re:My Mom... (Score:3)
Re:I must be weird (Score:2)
Well, apart from Yahoo mail (never even heard of it)...
So you've never, ever seen someone with an @yahoo.com email address? Try searching this page, there are at least 3 under this story already.
I've never seen the attraction of portals which exist only to filter your view of the net - I don't want it filtered, I want it all.
Err, yahoo is good for finding generic sites about a subject, whereas I'd use google for anything more specific. Trying to do broad searches under google means you get far too many results to deal with, most of which are only tangentially related.
Geography may be an issue here, I'm in the UK and YahooUK is just junk; perhaps the US site is better.
Errm, I've just been to the UK Yahoo page, and it's pretty much identical to the .com version. There's a link to Yahoo Mail in the top-right hand corner.
what does 4 sites really mean? (Score:2)
yup, 1 hit for the bad guys.
a p03m (Score:5)
v10137 r b1u3
4a1f my c11ck
r b310ng 2 u
-- .sig are belong to us!
All your
Actually (Score:5)
Awwwwwwwwwwww... Group hug, everyone!
Re:They do NOT. (Score:3)
Hey, look--I found a better example, right here under my chair!
Let's say that Bob's Corner Grocery has one aisle of produce and ninteen aisles of kitchen knives. The vast majority of the kitchen knives are stolen property, though purchased by Bob from various distributors (Bob himself wouldn't even think of stealing somebody else's property.) "Heck, I'm no criminal," Bob is fond of saying, "I just sell groceries. It's not any of my business how my suppliers get their goods, now, is it?"
You're the dupe that looks straight into Bob's bewildered, childish eyes and says, "It's OK, Bob. You're not part of the problem. Don't you worry one bit, I still believe in you!" right as the police arrive to drag him downtown.
Napster does indeed give away something you should be paying for. Napster, before it started getting sued, was doing exactly jack and squat to curb the distribution of copyrighted material through it's service. The Napster client app is completely useless without the central server, and Napster is in charge of running that server. It's like saying that the bullet just happened to hit Mr. Doe, and all this poor guy here did was pull the trigger.
You're not far off the mark... (Score:2)
I bet if they did a second study it would show that half the people who do not use the big 4 sites tend to spend more time on Slashdot than any other site.
End prophesy here
Um, porn, anyone? (Score:2)
Serious flaws in this article (Score:4)
1. The slashdot header is about four companies getting "half the clicks" when the report measured "time spent online". Quite something different.
2. The article from the e-commerce times did not include a link to the original report and did not print the actual numbers from the Jupiter Media Metrix report. You can find the report from Jupiter here: http://www.jup.com/company/pressreleaselist.jsp
3. When you look at the numbers you see that AOL alone gets 32% of the minutes spent, Microsoft gets 7.5%, Yahoo 7.2% and Napster gets 3.6%.
And even the report from Jupiter says very little about the method: "Total Usage Minutes: The total number of usage minutes spent at the online property, Web site, category, channel or application during the course of the reporting period."
In my opinion this report only states what we already knew: many American households connect to the Internet via AOL.
Like hell they do (Score:3)
Interesting Stats (Score:2)
50% of users time is spent on 4 sites.
There are 500 Million users approx.
Lets say 75% of them surf the web, thats probably being fairly conservative too.
Lets now persume they spend, on average 5 hours per week on the web for personal reasons.
OK so 500 Million * 5 * 0.75 = 1875 Million Hours surfing time.
Now 4 companies get 50% of this time. 1875*.5 = 937.5 Million Hours on these 4 companies.
No of seconds in a week: 604800
606,350 hits per second for these four sites, persuming that each user makes one hit.
Taking the average no of hits for the front page or yahoo.com, msn.com, aol.com and napster.com 12.25.
606,350*12.25 = 7,427,788 hits per second.
Now lets persume msft gets 1/4 of this traffic:
7,427,788 *
Now they must have one hell of a server farm to get IIS to serve that lot, if it actually manages to stay up long enough.. they would be far better off using apache and a *nix which would fare far better
Another interesting thing to note out of these 4 sites, 1 Uses IIS, 1 uses AolServer on Solaris, 1 uses apache on an unkown unix and the other runs using an unkown server (probably apache) on FreeBSD.
(Yes and I know no of hits != time spent on the site, but then again its likley to be connected in someway.)
"time online" = big downloads? (Score:3)
I can't help noticing that Napster and Microsoft both offer very large downloads... most of the "time" is probably just people downloading huge files in the background.
I'd guess that therefore AOL and Yahoo are the real biggies for time spent actually looking at stuff.
And? (Score:5)
Anyway, the article citing the concentration of big business... This is a surprise? Consolidation is a new thing? How many active distros are there for Linux right now? 14? Really? Raise of hands for Mandrake/Red Hat/Slackware/Debian/Suse? Did I miss anyone? (probably did and that will just serve to destroy my argument...).
How about your television shows? How many *major* stations are there? Certainly not 14...
And on and on and on... You see, consolidation is a fundamental principle. As the goals of a large group of people come closer together, the group merges, pools resources, and strives to better the achievement of the common goal.
Now perhaps this is a dangerous merge, but a surprise. Hardly...
Not fair "results" (Score:2)
Think of how many AOL-ers are out there. And guess what? I'm sure 95%+ of them still have their default home page as AOL.com. Same for newbies using IE, visiting Microsoft's site. Or someone who happened to download a program from Yahoo that changes your starting page (with or without your knowledge/confirmation). Napster? Well, if you count some college kid queueing up 200 songs while he's at class as spending HOURS a day on Napster, then that's just as wrong.
I'm sure these portals get plenty of traffic, but if every AOL browser decided to point to goatse, I'm sure the media would be reporting that America is suddenly fascinated with people ripping open their asses.
Other software (Score:3)
AOL has the AOL client, and is really more of a very large BBS than an ISP, some AOL users may hardly ever use the internet, they might just use the BBS services. A second point about AOL is that many people that don't use the official AOL might use AIM.
Yahoo! also has an instant messenger, which people probably leave connected while using the internet.
Microsoft has MSN, and who knows how many people use things like windows update and other "features" of windows that access Microsoft's servers.
Many people who use Napster probably just leave it connected so people could download files from them, also downloading MP3s can take a long time.
These results do not really reflect the actual usage of the websites.
Assimililated sites (Score:3)
cnn -> aol
terraserver -> ms
hotmail -> ms
ussearch -> yahoo
infospace -> ms
four11 -> yahoo
mapquest -> yahoo?
egroups -> yahoo
netscape -> aol?
I'm sure there are many more. These are just the ones I've used.
Instead of learning to adapt, they just assimilate.
the trouble is... (Score:2)
why?
revenues. they make more money. if microsoft can say "we're the most visited destination on the web" then everyone wants to advertise at hotmail, and they'll pay a ton of cash to do so.
they don't care about you, because you'll see past it. like most of the non-flock.
Re:If microsoft means www.microsoft.com then .. (Score:5)
--
THE CLICK NOT TAKEN (Score:2)
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim
Because it was grassy and wanted wear,
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I marked the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I,
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
-Robert Frost
do not bemoan what the masses do my slashdot friends
Re:I must be weird (Score:2)
may not quite mean what you think (Score:2)
(Of course, that is not to deny that mergers have happened and that the available choices have narrowed.)
The thing is... (Score:4)
We get all of our content in one place, because it's quick and it's easy. The sad thing is, all the cool stuff slips between the cracks. It's kinda like radio these days: you can get decent sounding blandness on any radio station, but good luck getting Tom Waits. Updated for today: you can get an easy OS installed free, but stability is gonna be a bitch to get your hands on. Or, for this new survey: you can get your news and your content at CNN and Yahoo!, but you're going to get one narrow viewpoint - McContent, if you will.
...