AOLization of America 199
PanchoNB wrote to us with a feature that C|Net is currently running about the AOLization of America. I think it's been called the "McWorld" concept before, but the feature does a good job of looking at how powerful Time-Warner-AOL really is, as well as talking about the history and prospects.
So break 'em up. (Score:1)
Sure, it's not as simple as waving the Slashdot wand at them (new def. of the Slashdot effect?), but maybe we should start pushing for that monopoly investigation now. Look at how long it took to get the MS process even this far along...
One of the after-effects of AOLism ... (Score:2)
Re:Users can grow up (Score:4)
ME TOO!
:)
The AOL Rebellion (Score:1)
Re:Good for AOL (Score:1)
Re:Good for AOL (Score:1)
Society is getting smarter now days. People are putting more pressure on companies to clean up their acts (how come McDonalds and Walmart seem to advertise all of their "community services" the provide?). Still people are a bit to easily swindled, although the Internet is helping some of these problems.
Large monolithic companies use these stragies all of the time, and sometimes large companies are good, but most of the time they are reality of modern society. (I mean, is it pratical for everybody to manifacture stuff on their own scale, nope?)
disclamer: I don't usually visit walmart (the size scares me), I don't eat a McDonalds, and I don't particularly by brandname clothes. I do however buy mostly brandname electronics and conmputer gear.
It bears repeating again and again.... (Score:2)
I personally think that the article written in C|Net is proof that the AOL merger with Time-Warner is going to have MUCH more serious side effects than any power that Microsoft wields in the software market.
The reason is simple: control by a few people a _very_ large fraction of our mass media outlets. Between all the AOL divisions and Time-Warner assets, they can effectively have a very large say in what we read in general interest periodicals, on we see on television (over-air broadcast, cable AND direct satellite), what we see in the movie theaters, what we hear with records, and soon what we read on the Internet. This is media control that Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst at the beginning of the 20th Century could NOT begin to dream about, and the fictional Elliot Carver from the James Bond movie TOMORROW NEVER DIES is no longer a far-fetched character. To say it has harmful effects on the expression of free speech is a major understatement, to say the least.
At least with Microsoft Windows 98/2000, you can run alternate web browsers from Netscape and Opera Software, use streaming-media programs from Real Networks and Apple, and even use alternate office productivity suites from Corel, Lotus/IBM and Sun/StarOffice.
AOL will eventually give obvious preferential treatment to Time-Warner mass media output to AOL users, and this is VERY bad for its competition.
Re:DOH.. formatted version of above (Score:1)
George Carlin, actually. Unless Dennis Miller stole it. A sobering observation, nonetheless.
Re:There's a difference (Score:2)
You not giving people enough credit. People are smart. If people are looking to find out about computers and technology, then AOL must comply. It is why Capitalism works. Businesses change based on the needs of the consumers.
Stategic warfare (Score:1)
You're also forgetting... (Score:1)
More powerful than a speeding packet! (Score:1)
Faster than a speeding packet!
More Powerful than a linux server!
This looks like a job for...
Oh. Wait, forget it. AOL owns Time-Warner, Time-Warner owns DC Comics, DC Comics owns Superman.
Hmm... Any open-source superheroes out there?
drool-proof rules when it comes to sex (Score:1)
And this has led to a huge installed base that creates its own added value by itself. I joined after years and years of looking down my nose because certain communities are already big and up and running, filled with actual real people, wher it was irrelevant whether they needed drool-proof software or not. Specifically for me it was the gay male community out to hook up for quick sex - and since I preferr 'em big and stupid the whole drool-proof aspect is only an advantage, I guess. When it comes to connecting to humans within your own metropolitan area for some non-geek activity, the technological superiority of IMAP and HTML 1.1 and IRC just don't cut it over the non-geek drool-proof ISP filled with scores and scores of actual humans who just wanted to get online quickly to do the same thing.
A quick look around other communities on AOL shows that it's the same for other groups, like, say, the teen market. But I really, really think that AOL made it almost overwhelmingly because of adults wanting to get laid in some form or another, an aspect of their growth nobody really wants to admit.
When it comes to paying, drool-proof seriously rules for most people out there. The future is not going to be like Star Trek, the future is on its way to look more like LEXX
Re:Eeek.. (Score:1)
I got a good laugh out of that one. ;)
Again, don't do it then.
Ok, lets get serious for just a minute. The main problem ( and I agree with the poster that your responding to in this regard ), it that your average Joe and Joeanne on the street want convenience above all else.
Reliability, much less privacy and security, are totally secondary to them.
At least that is until they realise it's implications in terms of receiving a couple of hundred spam e-mails each day.
By that point though, they are already too far gone. The system that they are using has become a crutch that they can't live without.
This is a "marketing strategy" that has been very successful for Micro$oft and to a lesser extent, for AOL.
This is one of the reasons why so many people are pushing for the development of more user friendly internet tools for Linux. Hard core geeks don't need them, but Grandma and Granpa do.
To date, that seems to be the best way to prevent corporations like AOL from developing a stranglehold - by empowering the end users to make their own choices without requiring them to become experts.
And yes, I'm veering way off-topic. ;)
You might be strangling my chicken, but you don't want to know what I'm doing to your hampster.
Re:AOL's power. (Score:1)
It discusses social engineering on a massive scale, in a much more chilling way then 1984 ever does.
Oh Im so glad I'm a beta, cause Alpha's think awful hard....
Thats where society could so easily end up... who watches the watchers. Even those with the best of intentions get distorted.
Every time I reread BNW I get the serious shivers
Re:What of Netscape/Nullsoft? (Score:1)
Exactly what are these highest (it's 420, do you know where your ganja is?) of principles you speak of? If we were living in a more perfect world, maybe Netscape and Nullsoft would work to get more sane copyright and privacy laws around the world, music would be free, and you can choose to live your life as an anonymous coward using any encryption you want. Yet somehow things never worked out that way, and Netscape and Nullsoft were just software companies after all, and never really had these highest of principles to sell out on in the first place.
on average, you're both right (Score:1)
uh... not quite: mean, median and mode, are three meaningful "average" values in a population sample.
An important observation about AOL -AOL=MICROSOFT? (Score:1)
--cr@ckwhore
Why? I don't get it... (Score:1)
Your primary complaint, "freeloaders leeching off the cable co's network," suggests that either the cable co. is being ripped off by people using their infrastructure or that you are having your bandwidth stolen.
I have trouble believeing that the cable co. isn't going to protect its investment. Don't they charge rent on the modems? Aren't they charging access fees to cover their infrastructure costs? How would any of this change if they started allowing people to pay another company for the email accounts, web space, and Usenet access that accompany an account with an "Internet Service Provider"?
So, assuming that the people taking advantage of the "open access" are still paying the cable company for the bandwidth, who loses? Even if the "new" ISP's can work the deal so that is costs the same to the end user (ISP fee + rent on modem + access fee == old fee paid to cable company for proprietary cable internet service) the same people would be signing up for the service as would have before. I don't see how it would attract a big crowd of new users, especially not big enough to saturate the network and create notable bandwidth problems.
That's my take on the situation. All that, just to say, in a few words, "I don't get it." What issues have I overlooked? Are there other factors that I'm not understanding about the situation? Please let me know.
With all this talk of monopolies... (Score:1)
wouldn't Parker Brothers' controlling interest in Monopoly constitute an illegal Monopoly monopoly?
Check out the full story over at the Onion [theonion.com].
You'll take it and you'll like it! (Score:1)
You'll get used to it. After all, you watch television, right? Who do you think they customize that medium for, people who actually have some vague notion of how a TV works, or just the average shmuck that'll sit through the commercials / pay the cable bill?
Sturgeon's law applies to the TV as well as the internet - but I don't see a stampede of people disconnecting because of it. Evidently shit is in high demand.
ONE good use for AOL (Score:1)
Open, click "sign on", walk away for 5 minutes, then minimize: instant, free, short-term ISP.
Re:Users can grow up (Score:1)
Re:AOL's power. (Score:1)
This is a serious issue (Score:2)
One of the great promises of the internet that caused everyone to buy into it in the mid-90s was that information distribution on the net was comparatively cheap (next to television or print) and, as a result, anybody could put anything on the net; it meant that information could be widely distributed in a way that had never been possible before.
The risk involved in having a provider dominate the marketplace is that that won't necessarily be true. Not only could AOL choose to place 'filtering' software on its network, justify it on the grounds that it wants to protect its customers from evil things, and get away with it, but once it is large enough, it can put pressure on *other* providers to not host sites that AOL finds objectionable (by threatening to block the provider's entire IP range).
Eventually, someone would step in with an antitrust action --- but it would take a while, and an immense amount of damage would be done in the meantime.
More scary things about AOL (Score:3)
AOL's software design habits are especially scary. Their programmers seem to intentionally ignore previous art, to the point where they reinvent every wheel, and seem to have a preference for square ones at that. Every new feature is hard to use, learns no lessons from existing public domain designs, and then they just leave it there, and don't fix it until it becomes a marketing tactic again. Mon dieu, their 1993 newsreader was the worst, and they left it that way for years before updating it, and it's still nowhere near as useable as any newsreader you or I would tolerate.
OK, ok... rant mode off.
What of Netscape/Nullsoft? (Score:5)
When Netscape became popular, I enjoyed downloading the latest preview releases and I reported my share of bugs. The whole idea of Netscape thrashing Microsoft in the browser war was thrilling! Microsoft was a giant, and as a rule I always root for the underdog (which reminds me... vote for Alan Keyes!!!). When Nullsoft released WinAmp, I found my entrance into the world of MP3s, listening to the latest in controversial technology.
For me, Nullsoft and Netscape represented a change in the way the world worked... a departure from a centralized computer world. It was a world full of grey areas of privacy and copyright that I hoped would be worked out by a global consortium as opposed to the restrictive political regimes of any single nation.
When Netscape and Nullsoft were purchased by AOL, a company that represented "the enemy" for me, I realized that everything I had hoped for and believed in had crumbled to the power of the dollar.
To this very day, that's precisely what AOL represents... that enough money will overcome even the highest of principles, and that at some point, everyone sells out.
--
"Insightful"? (Score:1)
"Not everyone is as savvy as your average
How about:
Not everyone is as savvy as your average cookbook reader. Many, many people need McDonald's (or something like McDonald's) to get their daily nutrition.
See how dumb that argument is? Leaving aside for the moment the question of whether AOL == online (not to mention McDonald's == nutrition), we still have the question of the analog to the "nice restaurant" ISP. Or, for that matter, the equivalent of the grocery store ISP.
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Re:A MOMENT OF SILENCE PLEASE (Score:1)
See the "Voice s from the Hellmouth Released in Paperback" [slashdot.org] story.
Re:Not everyone is a guru... (Score:1)
AOL/TW in Europe (Score:1)
Re:Even scarier (Score:1)
Re:The future of AOL (Score:1)
What's needed is something more like PBS, but online
:-)
:-)
Such as... PBS Online?
www.pbs.org [pbs.org]
Disclaimer: My own work is on pbs.org. I'm the lead tech on the Zoom web site.
Even scarier (Score:1)
merger? Talk about large, sterile, lifeless and faceless conglomerates.
Re:I beg to differ on a couple points... (Score:1)
Actually, I read an article in the Washington Post a few months back that mentioned the profit margin for BYOA users was much better than for dial-up.
Re:More scary things about AOL (Score:1)
Sorry, but the rest of us never got baked beans.
Wait, I never signed up for AOL. That might explain it.
Re:Not everyone is a guru... (Score:1)
Whoa wait... why is this necessarily good? It's like having a driving school for blind people. Teach them how to drive with an instructor, but not by themselves. Who gains anything from these people going online? Most people go online just cause of the fuzz around it... who gets somehting? big companies. Most people dont need the net, and lots and lots and lots think that just because theyre anonymous they can harrass and ruin for others.
If someone needs the net, teach him how to use it instead... it's not very hard my grandma managed to do it pretty well. When you teach your kid to ride a bike, you have supports for them not to fall... but anyone will agree that you remove those supports after a while so the kid learns to bike.
Not everyone can be a guru, but anyone can learn.
Re:Not everyone is a guru... (Score:1)
Re:Not everyone is a guru... (Score:1)
Too bad you cant use it with your great AOL... this has to be a troll.
What irony! (Score:1)
Finally... (Score:2)
Not True (Score:1)
That's what I love about them high-school girls. I get older, they stay the same age... yes they do.
--Wooderson 1976
Re:"Insightful"? (Score:2)
-Mad Dreamer
Re:LAOL (Score:1)
We Control The Internet (Score:1)
So AOL takes over the existing Internet and turns it into a noisy squall of pop-up adds and spam.
While they're doing that, we're drilling holes in our walls and ceilings and networking our home-built Linux servers to our neighbor's computers, our friend's computers, our PDAs, our friggen toasters, whatever, making our own internet, one that AOL can't control, and won't be able to gain access to. AOL cannot control the internet anymore than you can hold the oceans in a thimble.
Re:Eeek.. (Score:2)
Easily scared, aren't you?
Expand that to the entire Internet.. since they're Microsoft supporters, we could see "This website ONLY WORKS with AOL and IE running under Windows . Any other systems WILL BE DEMOLISHED!" or something like that..
First of all, AOL is a direct competitor of Microsoft and AFAIK they don't like each other too much. Recall the latest spat over InstantMessenger compatibility.
Second, even if you meet such a site -- so what? As the old advice goes, don't do it then. Proprietary AOL content, not accessible otherwise than through AOL, exists and is plentiful. Does it bother me? Not at all. I just don't go there
Maybe, but remember how hard it is to get AOL5 out once you've put it in.
Again, don't do it then. I don't remember how hard it is exactly for this reason. My need for coasters have long been satisfied and AOL CDs now go to trash (sometimes making a detour via the microwave).
Sure, they won't take it ALL, but what happens when they apply their censorship to most of Usenet?
Err, do you understand what Usenet is and how it works? AOL censoring Usenet is in the same class as processor-exloding emails.
Kaa
Re:Growth Slowing (Score:1)
--
The future of AOL (Score:2)
Technologies such as QNX, BeIA, Linux, and PocketPC (or whatever they're calling it today) are in the forefront of the client-side devices, and they all have markets in the future in client-side devices. As people rush to deliver media over the 'net, we (the community) either have to 1. sit back and watch, or 2. form community sites of our own. I'm not talking about Slashdot here - while /. is nice, Andover.net (VA Linux) is a media company (division) devoted to making profits through application-over-the-web and other media ideas. What's needed is something more like PBS, but online - a sponsored but not advertised web media presence. Sadly, these animated gifs (and java ads) seem to be taking over the web.
It's time for the community to take back the web!
---------------------------------
Re:AOL's power. (Score:1)
I'm going to be sick... (Score:1)
Do you use AOL? Oh, you're one of those Netscape users, huh?
AOL is designed in such a way that users find it difficult to leave for 'real' ISPs. Like the transition to Linux from that other OS, AOLers are frightened by what AOL portrays as a 'difficult to use, big, scary, pr0n filled world where anyone can get plans to blow half the world apart or home-build napalm.' Problem with that is, much of the net's less pleasing content is hosted by AOL. I have to admit that my opinion is extremely biased (I was forced to use that pile of *expletive* for a while and I still have nightmares about logging in) but AOhelL is about as dangerous as a rabid dog on crack. I wonder if I actually had content there...-Elendale (thinks he's posted this to every AOL story now...)
Good for AOL (Score:2)
What is happening with ISPs is the same thing that has happened in every other industry ever developed. If you don't care and don't want to research the matter, you choose the biggest, most expensive, most overrated, and generally worst option of all. I mean, does anybody actually consider McDonalds to be "good food"? It's cheap, it's easy, and there's one within fifty feet of any point in America. However, that does not make them a monopoly.
So, yes, if you are one of the poor saps who eats at McDonalds, shops at WalMart, watches the local news, and uses AOL, then your view of the web will probably be as bland as anything else.
Turn up the radio, no fuck it, turn it off
-- Rage Against The Machine
Another Thing... (Score:1)
The moment I heard of the merger, I knew it would happen, as did many others I am assuming-simply because it is the merging of two seperate markets to converge into one market...
And...
I can cite Steve Jobs, The Woz, Bill Gates, Jeffrey Bezos, Paul Allen, The Founders of Yahoo, Andy Grove, and Hewlett and Packard's brilliance...but Steve Case? He is a MORON; INCREDIBLY STUPID, he does not possess the intellectual capacity to head AOL-TW, his stupidity is extremely overwhelming
AOLization of Irish TV too! (Score:1)
I was absolutely disgusted that no-one realised that AOL!=Internet
If I could remember more details I would have given the editors an education. (emails, letters, maybe even phone calls)
I think it's about time we educated the general public that there is a hell of a lot more to the 'net than these chatrooms targeted at the technologically retarded.
------------------------------------------------ -
"If I can shoot rabbits then I can shoot fascists" -
Re:Yet another... (Score:2)
Actually not really... Were you ever on EFnet while AOL had their IRC servers linked? Virtually every channel had *!*@*.aol.com banned cause of the amount of idiots. They like the intriguing places beyond the playground. I'd love if they wised up before they went into the real world but sadly, they dont. They spill over everywhere.
I agree (Score:1)
ie. what you think.
Big Brother Style.
MS domination just means different buttons on your browser
I am worried about AOL and will do my damnest to give out about them to people I know who are new to the 'net
------------------------------------------------ -
"If I can shoot rabbits then I can shoot fascists" -
Where's the Steve Case Borg icon (Score:1)
Re:"Insightful"? (Score:1)
Anyway, since it was on the subject of people who know what they're doing, I don't want to look totally ignorant... here's that AGAIN...
How about:
Not everyone is as savvy as your average cookbook reader. Many, many people need McDonald's (or something like McDonald's) to get their daily nutrition.
Wait, I've got a better one. How about: Not everyone is as savvy as your average airline pilot. Many, many people need TWA (or something like TWA) to get from Boise to Calcutta.
Anyone can switch around the contents of a metaphor to make it sound right, but lets face it. I bet you weren't born with a keyboard in hand either. You had to start somewhere. The reason this post was moderated up is that being elitist won't get us anywhere. I don't like AOL any more than the next guy, but I have to admit that I was pretty fond of Prodigy the first time I used it years and years and years ago.
The simple fact that all us l33t slashdotters are loath to admit is that we ALL started out there as a person equal in knowledge to a shuddering AOLer afraid to put the shiny round thing into the big scary computer.
It's the truth. Knowledge, by definition, is learned. I'd rather start with Dr. Suess than Dr. Freud.
-MadDreamer
-Mad Dreamer
Re:What of Netscape/Nullsoft? (Score:1)
Re:AOL's power. (Score:1)
Re:...and why should they? (Score:1)
Re:An important observation about AOL -AOL=MICROSO (Score:1)
Re:Growth Slowing (Score:1)
Why I *hate* AOL/Public schools [slightly OT,rant] (Score:1)
Newbies are inevitable. Even when the whole world is wired to the hilt, there will be children getting online for the first time. The evil of AOL is not in the volume of newbies they bring in, nor the caliber of newbies they bring in.
The true evil of AOL is that they encourage people to be AOL dependant. And in AOL's mind that means keeping them iiiignoooooraaaant as a steaming pile. How many AOL users think that the WHOLE Internet is a commercial product? How many realize that 'netiquette even exists, let alone what it might be? These people can't be fully faulted for not knowing; at the same time they are a nuisance or worse, and most have NO INTENTION WHATSOEVER of getting a clue.
Those AOL user effectively value stupidity as something to be protected. How can anyone surf porn 90 hours a week and then say they don't have time to learn about the tool they've been using?
Anyone who uses AOL should get on the clue train and go to a free ISP. People who don't understand the concept of a traffic network shouldn't be allowed to drive cars. People who think the internet comes on a CD will add to the stupidity level and be a time sink for the less stupid.
If I EVER have a chance to bitch slap the people who built AOL, I'll use that chance to put my foot through their face.
"A witty saying proves nothing." -Voltaire
Re:I'm going to be sick... (Score:1)
Re:Remember Kayla (Score:1)
Re:ONE good use for AOL (Score:1)
Re:Why I *hate* AOL/Public schools [slightly OT,ra (Score:1)
Re:Eeek.. (Score:2)
That is the part that scares me. The media has had a love affair with all of the bad stuff on the internet for a while, only reporting about crackers and perverts and child pornography. Now Time-Warner has a reason to print those, and maybe at the bottom tell people about AOL's blocking of "questionable" content.
The people on AOL that don't like those little signs that say "Please do not press this button again." will go elsewhere. And once elsewhere, they will persecute AOL users like AOL persecutes free speech. "This site is ONLY viewable in Mozilla, Opera,
There's a difference (Score:2)
As a thought experiment, imagine an ISP that is as easy to use as AOL (is purported to be). Now imagine that ISP had "cyber" training centers for learning to to use Internet-standard tools (irc, ftp, web, etc). The training would also include setting up PPP on your computer, some basic net safety (firewalling, anti-virus, etc). Does this sound good? Does it sound like AOL?
--
Re:I agree (Score:2)
I looked at that list and just the cable TV channel assets alone represents most of the high-profile channels on cable TV (the HBO channels, the Cinemax channels, TVKO pay-per-view, the CNN news channels, TBS Superstation, TNT, and Turner Classic Movies). We are talking AT LEAST _15_ channels of high-profile programming on digital cable and satellite TV!
Like I said originally some time ago: while everyone here on Slashdot is zealously bashing Microsoft they are a bit mum and confused at what the AOL Time Warner conglomerate could easily do to stifle expression of free speech.
uh huh (Score:2)
Gee, now there is a good way to take any bite out of your article.
It shouldn't be suprising though. AOL is doing what the market asks of you, just like microsoft did: expand your market, keep costs low, and keep profits up. They sure do this well: saturation marketing, easy to use, proprietary software, and poor connectivity and poor service.
Microsoft got in trouble mainly because they are such pompous assholes. The justice department has to hit someone once in a while to make it look like it's doing it's job. They were the perfect target. As far as tactics AOL isn't necessarily much different.
They *do* make the internet easy to use for people who have near zero technical ability, sure. But at what cost? THey don't mind censorship at all. They don't like open standards (which can be very profitable, although the flipside can be as well. I think that works better for hardware providers as opposed to software/service providers). They don't mind providing poor service, and they have had PR issues more than once because of their software.
Would anyone here apply the same argument to microsoft? I don't think so.
My main point is that the current market ideal creates and encourages these type of corporations. Wheter or not the government's role in this is good or bad is another debate, I think it's more important to show that capitalism is sliding down the slipery slope twords a more fascist model. Yes, I really mean that. It's all there for you to see. You hardly have to even read between the lines anymore.
Re:Eeek.. (Score:2)
So don't go to that site! We've been there. Remember CompuServe, Prodigy, and, yes, AOL about a decade ago? All proprietary and closed in terms of both access and content. Than along comes the Internet which blows those closed services out of the water. Most fizzle. AOL survives only by becoming an ISP for the dumbmasses. Unfortunately, no one has ever gone broke underestimating the American people, but so what? No shortages of alternatives exist thanks to the open model of the internet. If someone tries to close it up, they will be routed around in the marketplace just as the online services of the 80s were. Amazing what passes for "monopoly" these days....
Re:AOL's power. (Score:2)
Sure, completely hypothetical:
Lets say that TimeWarner continues to grow, and gains.. 90% market share. Quite unrealistic, but hear me out. They grow to this size by buying out competition, stealing ideas -- er.. innovating, etc, etc.
So, when almost all people come home from work, and turn the evening news, they see AOL/TW news. The content is developed and censored/moderated/whatever by them. They fire up their web browser, and almost all news they see comes from the same place. Newspapers and radio, same thing. One source. It might not look like one source -- different names, but essentially, the news is coming from the same place.
Getting back to my point of "I saw it on the news/read it in the paper, so it must be true" mentality, what's to stop a huge bohemoth like this media machine from hurting competitors, other than trivial laws (which we all know only work sometimes).
What if AOL/TW is in bed with a presidential candidate (I'm being metaphorical here -- no, really)? Would we even KNOW about the other candidates? Most certainly, the most publicised candidate would have a somewhat unfair jump on the others.
Think of coverups. AOL screws up. They let a whole database of all their clients passwords and credit card numbers be cracked. Would we know about it? Accountability gets thrown out the window.
These are all worst case situations, of course, but.. well.. I'm paranoid.
There's no HARD evidence that anyone ever landed on the moon.
Re:It's not AOL, and it's not Microsoft... (Score:2)
It's a complex issue. Even if a few members of an organization want to Do The Right Thing(c), there are probably many others who just want to make money. If a company changes its mind, it's not necessarily because the company is talking out of two sides of its mouth, it's because there are two mouths.
Also, any organization that becomes sufficiently large will have many opportunities to piss off their customers at one point or another. With many customers with many conflicting opinions, sometimes you have to just get on with business.
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Smart != Computer Guru (Score:2)
Re:AOL's power. (Score:2)
Look at Time-Warner's cable TV assets:
1. CNN news channels (CNN, CNN Headline News, CNNfn and CNN/SI).
2. HBO channels (HBO, HBO multichannel, HBO en Espanol, Cinemax, Cinemax multichannel).
3. TBS Superstation, Turner Network Television, and Turner Classic Movies.
4. Time-Warner Cable, which owns 20% of the cable sytems in the USA.
Have you noticed that all the assets I mentioned above are immediately recognizable to any cable and DBS satellite TV subscriber? NOW you know what I have serious concerns about concentration of media power with the AOL Time-Warner merger.
Re:...and why should they? (Score:3)
--The knowledge that you are an idiot, is what distinguishes you from one.
thoughts (Score:3)
how so? easy. most of the internet will become less useful, but more entertaining.
the result will be more and more of the web being converted to pure entertainment plays, not even pretending to provide information (unbiased or not). and rife with marketing. in other words, most of the web will start to look like television. to be honest, this doesnt bother me much. i dont watch tv, and we all knew it would happen eventually. but not all of the internet can be whitewashed.
the reason you can get 5000 channels and still be bored with all of them is that you dont have many people setting up tv stations in their homes for fun. it doesnt cost as much to set up web content as it does to broadcast stuff. so we will always have a certain subgroup of people publishing on the web whatever the hell they want.
i suppose there is a possibility of infrastructure control that could hurt this, but i doubt it will happen. at&t, at the very least, certainly wont let aol/time-warner control the pipes- so we have at least two giants trying to prevent each other from controlling all bandwidth.
in other words, the ability to produce quality, unbiased content is still there.
but most of the people entering through aol will not be interested in investing the time or energy in finding that. so they will see all the marketing and electronic billboards set up for them, the custom-built ads created as "informative" sites pushing one product or another, and they will think that is all there is to the web.
meanwhile, more saavy users will shun commercial areas (in part) to frequent more obscure websites with informative but more importantly LESS BIASED content.
to those who argue that aol will buy out any site thats getting big enough, it is a consideration. but i for one think the great buyout of content is over, because (1) its hard to justify large sums for niche audiences and (2) it may not actually be worth aol's time or money to hit these small markets. they want to dominate larger audiences remember- and more particularly those willing to spend money, not cynical libertarian communist mp3-stealing hippie 3l337 h4xxx0rs like slashdot readers. (yes i know that was a self-contradictory exaggeration. but many people lump these groups together- and in any case they all represent people that are a pain-in-the-ass for aol or any company to deal with)
i think more and more people will self-segregate based in part on their technical knowledge and the ability to really think for themselves. its already happening, has happened since the internet began- like various IRC channels, for instance, which have vastly greater reservoirs of technical knowledge than others. in some ways, thats probably a good thing.
unc_
Not everyone cares, either... (Score:5)
AOL user.
Why? The only thing he uses his computer for is to receive and distribute email, with the occassional scanned-in JPEG of his granddaughter. I have no doubt he could set up an ISP account, but he'd rather be reading or coaching youth soccer or gardening or so on. For his purposes, AOL is just fine. (So is Windows, but that's another can of worms.)
Moral of the story: Usage of AOL does not imply a lack of intelligence -- just a lack of energy used in getting online.
--
Eeek.. (Score:2)
Re:Not everyone is a guru... (Score:3)
And who religiously downloads the latest Linux minor revisions or does FTP installs? Who actually run and patronize the sites with the most hits? Who is running Napster and Gnutella? Who is running Freenet? Who is watching streaming audio and video? Well, Slashdot Radio fans and audiophile geeks at least. If AOLers are driving up bandwidth it is only because of the NUMBER of them. Bandwidth desire and usage per capita is much higher in the geek population, I'd say: witness geeks who run and patronize sites on T1's and then go home to cable modems and personal internet servers and do even more stuff on the net. How about geeks with portables, cell phones, etc? AOLers all thought the internet was AOL's network. It was only when the web and other internet applications became big and ubiquitous did AOL open up to the whizbang stuff.
Not everyone is a guru... (Score:3)
-B
AOL and Open Access (Score:3)
Now, as part of Time Warner we do have something to worry about. This should prove a test of their character. Did they really want to give us choices, or were they merely leveraging themselves into the last mile.
If we want to keep our backbone and protocols free, we really need to fight the consolidation of the Internet giants. Both backbone AND last mile.
September? Sure... (Score:3)
And the famous spammers. They were based in Phoenix. I'm from AZ and remember them too. But your point is?
Mine was that not everyone is an expert. Everyone starts out. And they're usually stupid. Back when I got online with my awesome dialup (remember Archie, WAIS, gopher?), I sounded like a moron ("What's this 'Online Oracle' that everyone listens to?"), but there were people to help me. Now, it's just more noise among the (rapidly diminishing) signal. Do I care? Yeah, sure. Would I like everyone to know what "RFC" stands for? You bet. Do I want the old days back? No way.
I once tried using my brand spankin' new PPP account to look up Western Digital HDD specs in 1994. Couldn't do it: They didn't even have a www site; I had to a call (and pay for) a support line. There was no other way. And to think that just yesterday I got the specs for my brand new Quantum U2W SCSI HDD off the web and was up and running in minutes. (Seriously: How many of you would like to set up a new machine with old hardware, no hardware manuals/docs, and no Net connection whatsoever? I thought so.)
Do I want to go back to the "elites only", "PHB wants to know what's the point to this 'web' thing?" ways? Not a chance. Would you want to?
It's largely because of AOL that the web is so incredibly useful. More power to them, I say. Keep getting companies to put their stuff on the Web. I can't tell you how much I appreciate living in the age of the Biggest, Easiest Encyclopedia Ever Made.
I never want the Internet to go away. Ever. If it takes AOL to assure that, then that's the way it is and there's no point in worrying about it. Just keep doin' what you're doin' and preaching what you're preaching. It's good for you and good for me. And who knows? Maybe a few AOLers will see the light and join us in making their Net experience possible? Things could be worse, you know.
-B
Not quite that bad (Score:2)
So what does that mean for us normal, God-fearing internet users? Probably not much. Just more "Mee Toooo"'s on Usenet. Maybe more of those annoying AOL triangles as sponsors or supporters of a site. His denial of MSN from AOL IMer is just shrewd business practice: why let someone else mooch off of the progress you've built? Especially if it's AOL's most-moneyed competitor, Microsoft. It's not as if IMer isn't free anyway. And while AOL can boast IM members as part of its base, we're not giving them any money, just using a product they're giving out for free.
As for the fear that AOL sites will shut out those not using AOL browsers, I have this to say: The only sites that AOL is going to limit access to is members.aol.com sites, and who in hell visits those anyway? Seriously, if that happens, then AOL users can go to any number of free-hosting sites. And if it becomes a real problem, then some of the people using AOL will get pissed and go to a different ISP. AOL will recognize it's loosing members and back off.
I have no doubt that AOL will limit web content to its users, as it does now. But that doesn't mean that all of us will be censored. How can AOL censor any of Usenet from non-AOL users? Besides being against free-speech laws, it's just not feasible.
All that (and it's a lot) being said, I still don't like what AOL's doing. I don't like it that users think AOL IS the web, when there's so much else. I don't like it that people don't think they have more options that are just as easy as AOL (Mindspring, NetZero, etc.) I don't like it that such a bland and idiotic corporation will be controling as much as it does.
But I do like the fact that, someday, its practices will have to stop. This is highly theoretical and somewhat wishful, but there might come a day when advertisers are not willing to spend the three gazillion dollars it takes to advertise on AOL. There might come a day when something happens, AOL's stock takes a beating, and they find themselves without cash. There might come a day when all of the people not using AOL anymore actually cancel their accounts, and Case realizes he just lost half his subscribers. And, my biggest wish, there might come a day when people realize that just using E-mail and chat can be done easier and cheaper, and that's when AOL will really hit the fan.
Thank you.
AOL: Cisco of monopolies? (Score:2)
There are a few points of this article that I'd like to address.
AOL controls a vast number of online subscribers. More than any other online service. However, this is a far cry from what CNet describes as an "empire of near-Microsoftian proportions". Why? Simple, AOL does not have a monopoly. AOL couldn't start unfairly charging $30 per month for online access without a large defaction of users. There is simply too much competition in the ISP market.
"AOL isn't just an ISP..."
true. Every venue AOL is now entering, however, there is fierce competition as well. AOLTV with WebTV, new AOL Internet modules with older i-Pliances, Cable access against @Home, much more.
"The company has censored chat rooms and user home pages."
Sure. It's their service. Don't they have a right to control what users can say and do on it? Especially with more lawsuits like the one recently in Germany, I can't blame them. AOL is a family oriented online service. If you don't like censorship, go to Yahoo! chat or sign up for a Geocities homepage or something.
"AOL's proprietary browsers and email clients can keep users from venturing off the service."
That'll change, as we know now, Netscape 6 now supports the proprietary AOL email service (although Netscape is indeed owned by AOL, this will be a desired feature by many AOL subscribers).
And proprietary browser? Sure, they use Internet Explorer, which is a bit proprietary, but they don't stop you from using Netscape or other browsers.
ALthough I can't possibly see why AOL would want to merger with Time Warner, this is hardly a monopoly. Time Warner/AOL does not 'control' the media in any way. CNN is a trusted news source, I highly doubt they'd report on anything with a bias. (doesn't matter to me, I've already defacted to Fox News.)
And as for making their software available only on certain platforms... so?
AOL's software is targetted at beginners. AOL realized that there is no market for a simplicity ISP for Linux.
Looking ahead, I just can't forsee AOL abusing their subscriber base.
why ? (Score:2)
DOH.. formatted version of above (Score:5)
I've seen your arguement before. AOL fosters newbies who will eventually see the pure shit they are using and eventually 'grow up' to a 'real' ISP. I agree with it, but at the same time I think you're wrong.
Think about the average AOL user, ie: your mom, your grandparents, someone who's been enticed by the latest TV commercial. These are the people who use the computer only for word processing or for faxing. They don't need much else. They take this same "If it's got what I need, I'm happy" stance towards internet access. If AOL can give them stock quotes, e-mail, weather, shopping, IM's... why should they bother growing up?
This is the stance of the Common Everday Non-Techy Person, which is AOL's prime market. So they see a couple ads? They don't see a bunch of weird techy configuration stuff (my parents description of window's dial-up networking configs :P), they only see what they need and some minor hindrances.
My point is, more technical users (ie: those interested in computers, coders, gamers, etc.) will grow up to ISP's. However, this is a small fraction of AOL's user base, and that is why we will continue to have headaches like I've seen described here.
The AOL'ization of America was inevitable. If it wasn't AOL who came to fill the huge market gap that ISP's frankly can't deal with (while satisfying techies like us), someone else would. It's called business. All you elitist people out there are just going to have to realize that getting everyone online means getting everyone online, idiots and ignorants included. I'm reminded of a Dennis Miller quote: "Think of the average person in America. Now realize that 50% of America is dumber than that."
It's a pain, but we will have to deal
Re:Not everyone is a guru... (Score:2)
You mean they're doing
...and why should they? (Score:3)
Why should users "grow up"?
If they are getting something which seems to them to be a good deal -- largely because they aren't allowed to know there are better deals -- why would they strike out from the warm, cozy nest of AOL?
Furthermore, I think you vastly underestimate the number of people who want their world to be orderly and safe and tidy -- at any cost. The attitudes of /. (e.g. "He who would trade liberty for safety deserves neither") are NOT those of the rest of the world.
The so called "AOLization of America" is actually the "small-towning of America". It is an America where there is no privacy (everyone's in everyone else's business) and behavior is controlled by moral censure and there can be no dissent.
I feel confident that whoever came up with the unfortunately accurate expression "Global Village" never had the misfortune of living in an actual village.
Most people are never going leave AOL. Most people will never take the red pill. They like the safe blandness of AOL just as it is. These are people who live in suburbs, after all.
----------------------------------------------
Re:Users can grow up (Score:3)
Yet another... (Score:2)
I mean come on AOL has their own little playground. People either like it and stay there or wise up and go out into the real world. No harm in that.
And their business prospects are so bad they went out and by the proverbial dinosaur of the media world (TW) to try to make things better for them? And people are worried about this wonderful blend of incompetence and idocy? I'm not.
Users can grow up (Score:5)
At the same time, users can 'grow up'. They can outgrow AOL and eventually move to a real ISP. So that hand-holding can be useful, just like for a child, many of whom are quite annoying at first, then get much more pleasant. (Then there's adolescence -- script kiddies? :)
So all in all, I would say that in hindsight, AOL has actually been good for the Net by bringing on lots of users who eventually became good Netizens. (I can't believe I just wrote that.) I would even go so far as to say that there's a number of productive /.ers (myself not included) who got started with AOL. Then there's the trolls, so two sides to every piece of bread...
The question remains, what will happen now that they dominate content? I suggest that just maybe, they'll generate content to bring people online and interest them in the rest of the Net, and these users will eventually move on to better, more lively stuff. Even if they control 20% of Web content (a HUGE proportion), that means that there's four times as much stuff out there that they don't control. If you build it, they will come.
It'll be annoying, but it'll be good in the long run.
I beg to differ on a couple points... (Score:2)
Well, it's not 'available' the same way a server/phone trunk is marked in availability - can I connect 99.95% of the time. No. It is not high availability... of course, they say widely, and it is somewhat true - anywhere you have a phone line, you can get to AOL...
Internet service - they never really claimed to be, until recently. Their profits are from the non-internet content on their site. If you just dial into AOL as an ISP, then Netscrape your way way out of it (with the ugly stuff minimized), you are wasting time and money (but I got 500 free hours!?)...
They are getting to be a huge deal, and, like any other hopeful enterprise, take advantage of the people who are less informed, weaker minded, and those who just don't care...
I was happy when AOL first came out - it was the first cheap access to any outside content that I could get (the bills were high from the BBS calls)... Of course, then you had to add your own winsock, and do some other things, but at least it didn't feed you 'art' all day until you puked... and the chat rooms were almost real... not nearly as many gender-benders...
Installing AOL *still* screws up just about any other connections you might have. You have a VPN client. Install AOL and watch it fizzle. Another dial-up... good luck. Of course, if you have a 24/7 net connection, you don't dial-up and just connect to AOL via TCP/IP... though I heard they were getting rid of that / charging extra for it...
I don't have Time WAOLner Cable in my area, so that doesn't bother me too much... (I've ranted long enough anyway).
It's not AOL, and it's not Microsoft... (Score:4)
Re:Not everyone is a guru... (Score:5)
Not true! Who is more impressed by graphics-heavy web sites, and who is just as happy reading text with minimal formatting? Who sends email attachments as uncompressed
It's the AOLers driving bandwidth consumption, and therefore driving bandwidth expansion. The users who are considered "clueful" have mostly been online since the days of the 2400 baud dialup, and understand how to minimize bandwidth usage.
Uh, America is already AOL-ized (Score:2)
Re:AOL's power. (Score:5)
The media has WAY too much power. The Time-Warner merger with AOL gives them MORE power.
Imagine what it would be like if the media was controlled by a single organization. Ever read 1984? If not, do it. It's a really good read.
Slashdot-terminal has a quote in his sig. "He who controls the past controls the future. He who controls the present controls the past."
For those of you who haven't read the book, that quote refers to Winston Smith's job. His job was to 'update' old newspapers. If a paper made a 'mistake' in one of their articles. For instance, last quarter, the ministry of plenty could've said "There will be a surplus of goods next quarter. Everyone will get their boots and coats!" Which made the people happy, when actually the next quarter was a poor quarter. Nobody got their boots and coats. Smith's job was to update the article to show that the ministry 'didn't actually say' what it reported they said. When people tried to look up the article, they would realize that the ministry of truth actually did not say ANYTHING about boots and coats.
Anyway, my point is that the media is not trustworthy, and the general public are sheep. Look at Orson Welles' War of the Worlds broadcast. People killed themselves because they thought aliens were coming. (If you don't know anything about the WOTW broadcast, read up on it.. it's pretty interesting).
We need to start thinking on our own, and stop letting the little glass-fronted boxes in our livingroom and computerroom do it for us.
(side note: Rob, slashdot's eating HTML on the preview.)
AOL owns backbone? (Score:2)
AOL vs Microsoft (Score:2)
MS controls what you use to view content (IE vs NS)
AOL controls what you view (and, incidently, what you use).
When it comes down to it, what appears in the big empty space in window is much more important than who's bit of code was used to render it.