David Cassel (destiny@crl.com)
Mon, 16 Dec 1996 23:50:55 -0800 (PST)
D e c e p t i o n s ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ The AOL Insider reported that AOL has the most-downloaded photo in cyberspace--over one million downloads, and over a thousand a day last week. ("I counted them on Sunday night," the columnist told me in an interview.) That would come out to one every 90 seconds--but their figure is wrong. "Sunny Delight" is not a photograph, but a library--containing over 200 photos, which have been downloaded, presumably, an average of 5,000 times apiece. Among the photographs: "Mirror, Mirror...She is HOT!" (4410) "Open " Sezmyshirt"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" (8385) "SUNNY WINS BEST BUNS" (9956) "Our PERSONAL favorite! VAVOOM! (10396) "Two Words--YEE HAA!!" (6049) Photographs of the 23-year-old female wrestler appear in AOL's "World Wrestling Federation" area--which, predictably, wears the AOL Members' Choice logo. ("Where members go the most often and where they spend the most time.") The area is accessible even with AOL's Parental Controls set for "Teen Access" (which probably explains at least some of the downloads.) The AOL Insider conceded in an e-mail that it wasn't a single picture with one million downloads. "Add all the downloads..." they suggested. "There are more than 1.1 million downloads recorded here." And that does come out to one photograph of Sunny Delight being downloaded every 90 seconds. The record was 18,678 downloads, for "Her Skimpiest One Yet". (One of the least popular: "Doin' the Macarena!") "I just wish the worldwide media would give me the credit for it!" Sunny said in an AOL appearance in August. The World Wrestling Federation isn't a far step from AOL's original marketing campaign ("Ma! Pa shot up the AOL.") "Trigger-happy rural imbeciles and other goofy stereotypes do not constitute diversity," wrote a columnist in Advertising Age. The latest issue of Boardwatch magazine has a grimmer observation. "With more people abandoning online services every month, it's a wonder that America Online stock keeps rising," Actually, AOL's stock lost 11.9% of its value last week--and another 7.6% Monday. But it's not clear if even their membership is rising. When Steve Case boasted of 250,000 new subscribers in October, he didn't indicate how many were non-paying members using free-trial accounts. Last year the New York Times reported AOL routinely includes free-trial members in their membership figures--and in October, AOL's magazine ads had just offered 50 free hours. "The model seems to be 'lose money on every subscriber but make it up in volume'," Marc Andreessen told the Wall Street Journal, tongue-in-cheek. But the cynicism runs even deeper. "Once a member, always a member," says a former customer service staffer, who believes AOL adds former members to their subscriber totals. He conceded he had no direct knowledge of how the calculations are performed--but offered first-person accounts of other activities within customer service. * Staffers would create unlimited-access "overhead" accounts for their friends. * Wayward staffers would roam the chat rooms, bumping people offline with tools meant for Guides. * In the event of a member's death, staffers were instructed not to cancel accounts without a FAXed death certificate or power-of-attorney. The staffer still returns to AOL's pirated software chatrooms--and if the account is cancelled, he opens a new one. ("One more member for their member count.") His comments raise the prospect that recently-reported disconnections are deliberate measures by AOL to rotate subscriber access to the service. In any case, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution's "NetWatch" reported that busy signals and unexpected disconnections could persist until June. (One issue of the AOL Insider began by saying that if you were online to read it, "the modem gods are on your side.") AOL brags they will have doubled their capacity by this summer--but their usage has already tripled. One user reported downloading a 9 megabyte file from AOL's mirror site using a 28.8 modem, starting after 11 pm. Seven and a half hours later, only 3.5 MB had downloaded (an average rate of 8 kilobytes per minute.) "You'll no doubt write back with all kinds of reasons why this might have happened," they commented in a letter to technical support. "Please, just keep it. I'm not an idiot." "I've tried to be patient with your performance problems," they continued, "but this incident has suddenly made it clear to me: you're unable to reliably provide even the most basic of Internet services, the ability to download a file... It is clearly now time to find a new ISP." Ironically, among Steve Case's resolutions in his January 1 "Community Update" was providing better connectivity--seven months before a nationwide 19-hour outage. Resolution number five was "more--and even better--content". (December finds rumors they're axing half their content partners.) And even resolution number six--lower prices--contained a glaring misstatment. Case said AOL would lower rates, but had postponed changes because "we wanted to make sure the infrastructure was in place to handle additional demand without deteriorating the quality of service for all members." Strike three. Maybe that's why pranksters linked that letter to Keyword: Dogface. THE LAST LAUGH A source inside AOL customer service tells the story of the subscriber who phoned complaining AOL's software didn't protect her home. After all, it was AOL for windows. David Cassel More Information - http://www.wco.com/~destiny/time.htm ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ Please forward with subscription information and headers in-tact. To subscribe to this moderated list, send a message to MAJORDOMO@CLOUD9.NET containing the phrase SUBSCRIBE AOL-LIST in the message body. To unsubscribe send a message saying UNSUBSCRIBE AOL-LIST to MAJORDOMO@CLOUD9.NET ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~