Time Warner Properties May Only Be Available Through AOL
ryman writes "According to MSNBC, Time Warner is considering making its online content available without charge only to AOL subscribers. Sounds like a desperate move to redeem AOL, but this will have to take on a big toll on its online readership."
And I feel that most other Internet users, AOL or not, probably are thinking the same thing. Let's show them this.
But what do I know. I'm just looking for anonymous gay sex.
Say what you will about AOL, but it represents buzillions of peoples Internet access, AND from the standpoint of a CONSUMER it's not bad.
At the risk of being flammed to death, and no this isnt even a troll. I raise this point.
I'm a company, I've made some content and I only want people who are "members" and "customers" of my company to see this contaent..why cant I do this?
Sure it wil suck for the rest of us, but hell its their company...If you dont like it..buy stock.
"Enlightenment is your ego's biggest disappointment." --Yoginanda
... is madness. What's needed is syndication: why can't I pay my ISP a few bucks a month for access to a package of properties of my choosing? TW's advertisers should revolt over this.
I mean, do they expect to get more AOL subscribers? Who is going to get AOL just for TW content? Anyone?
Does anyone look at corporate websites anymore? The only national company whose site I ever look at is Microsoft, and that's only for MSDN stuff and security patches. Time Warner? Please. If I need to see what time Will and Grace is on, I can check the paper.
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
its about the only thing that made AOL popular when the net first emerged. this is just a last ditch effort, shoot the horse already.
and another one that's doing poorly.
I know! I'll bind them together at the hip like siamese twins! That will make them both look and function so much better! Ya, that's the ticket!
Stupid marketing dweebs.
If you post it, they will read.
Seems like they'd be limiting their paid audience if they only allowed AOL users to subscribe. This is, of course, assuming there is a big market for online subscriptions to People Magizine.
They should start out by just making it ad free through AOL. Then move to allowing extra features through AOL (premium stories, free music streaming). Then finally move to exclusive access.
Secondly, they gotta offer direct PPP access as an alternative. No way I'm using their bloated client, no matter how many features they stuff into it.
What about those of us who spend $90 on cable and internet service from Time Warner?
if I need to check a channel listing and can't get to their web page, I'll call with a complaint. If enough subscriber complain, it will be cheaper just to give access.
This smacks of other brillaint ideas like MSN's exclusive access to Viacom's Star Trek web site a few years back. I guess the target demographic for their magazines are people unable to use the internet. Maybe it should be aOL tIME wARNER?
Oh what shall we do?!? Seriously, who really cares if they take People and the like and make them AOL-only? I thought most people who read these magazines did so at the news stand or in the checkout line at the supermarket or at the doctor's office anyway.
Correct me if I am wrong, but taking successful online publications and tying them to an struggling, unwanted online service seems so very... 1998. Doesn't it?
Edith Keeler Must Die
First it is TW stuff, what is next? What happens when it comes to news and similar? I think that AOL should be split ut, one company supplies the net, the other content. No ties in between.
And M$ own internet provider should definitly be split out. This is bigger than the browsers, even though it is only about something very trivial at this point.
I really hope they do this because my primary competitors are AOLTIMEWARNER online publications. Mine will remain free.
Skiers and Riders -- http://www.snowjournal.com
I'm sure that their competitors will be happy to have me read their content.
What? Time Warner bought all their competition? Hmmmm...
This was long coming, since the announcement of the merger. Almost immediately we was a revival or the "AOL keyword" in addition to the URL in all Time-Warner owned media. Before that, the "AOL keyword" was nearly gone.
The recent announcement suggests that this has not worked, hence the need for more radical measures. If AOL has critical mass, they can pull it off and make people pay AOL fees just to download, say, Britney's latest CD, or cool Star Wars trailers. If they don't have enough critical mass, all they will achive is to bring down the once mighty TimeWarner online properties along with AOL.
So the real question is, does AOL have critical mass to carve out a proprietary section of the Web?
Not to use AOL.
How will this help TW sell more copies of EW, Time, or whatever? How will it help them sell more ads on the web-based versions?
Seems like robbing Peter to pay Paul. They may get a couple hundred thousand more AOL subscribers (though I doubt it), but they'll get fewer subscriptions to their magazines and fewer ads on their online properties.
This is msnbc 'reporting' this
Perhaps the AOL/TW execs are trying to redeem themselves for ever merging to begin with. AOL users will be much more likely to hang around if only AOL can offer things like CNN.com and rollingstone.com.
It also takes something away from MSN users, who already pay more than other generic ISP clients, and only get extra advertisements compared to the extra "features" of AOL.
Well, they're owned by AOL-TW.
It doesn't matter whether or not they lose readers. It matters whether or not they make more money. Will the cash earned by drawing more customers to AOL outweigh the cash lost through advertising?
The sad thing is that they aren't talking about a lot of money either way. I told them that the merger was a stupid idea for Time-Warner. Anyone who actually thought it through knew the same. Time-Warner traded a profitable business for monopoly money.
It's owned by AOLTW, and is free. Does this mean I'll have to get my national news from MSNBC? This could really be a problem because AOLTW has their fingers in a lot of pots, so a lot of high-content sites could quickly disappear? Also, has anyone interviewed AOLTW's advertisers about this? They can't be too crazy about having limited viewership. I would imagine an AOL-only crowd would skew demographics heavily...
I went to college for this?...
No.
Please, I hope they do. Take the boring old media off the internet. For that matter, withdraw AOL from the internet too. Make it a nice gula^H^H^H gated community like in the old days.
Send the spammers, squatters, lamers, MCSEs IP lawyers and the rest of the "cyberspace information superhighway" baggage back to AOL and quarantine it for the good of all.
they take cnn.com to AOL only. There's no way they'll take their truly popular sites private.
Sounds like a bad RIAA type dream to me. Oh Well... not like it was worth anything to me NEway...
Talk about camablizing TW for the sake of AOL.
If they really want to redeem make AOL an attractive choice, they should allow broadband AOLers to download TWs Tv shows and old movies and the like.
Of course they'd rather sit on their ass and wait for things like CDBPTPA or whatever to 'promote' broadband by making computers illegal so people won't steal their crap. Sheesh.
I do read CNN once in a while though, when people to link to it.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
No more free 'People' or 'Entertainment Weekly' online? Heavens- my life will be incomplete!!
The Internet is international. AOL is not. You do the math. They are effectively shutting out international users.
This won't work, because it will not be seen as AOL having extra features; it will be seen as Time-Warner lacking the feature of accessibility, and in the context of the Internet, users will always choose the most easily accessible source, and that means the one you don't have to sign up or pay for.
I for one welcome our new SCOviet Russian overlords to whom all our base are belong.
This could actually be a good thing. Pay a premium for advertising-free premium content. It's not all that different from paying for premium television channels (HBO, Cinemax, etc.) on your cable or satellite system.
If they're smart, they'll also make this available to non-AOL users through the Netscape Network as well, so all you need is their "Screen Name Service" and a browser to sign on. Price this fairly -- say, $4.95 a month -- and they might garner a good number of users. It's actually working pretty well so far for Real Networks; why not expand things a bit?
With ad revenues for web sites dwindling rapidly, this is probably inevitable. And I think it's ok.
Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
..where the prisoners inside are told the walls keep the barbarians out. And the "barbarians" don't care and build a better world outside the walls of the... garbage dump.
I don't subscribe to RMS's GNUtopian vision.
So what about TW's RoadRunner broadband customers? Do we get access as well? I've used RR for years now and I'm happy with the service.
So head on over MSNBC and Slate since you won't be reading CNN or Time anymore.
...it won't make a difference. After all, how many times have you seen someone here complain about the NYT free registration requirement to view articles? If people are complaining about free content I hardly think making it subscription-only will matter.
Anyone else here reminded of CompuServe? Or GE? Or Prodigy?
Carousel is a lie!
The AOL-TW camp with things like CNN, Time, AOL, and Netscape?
Or will you be in the MS camp with things like MSNBC, Slate, MSN and IE?
Now, as a Slashdot reader, you're thinking "I will choose neither! I will be free and independent!" Yes, that's all well and good right now, but in a few years, when all sorts of online properties are closed off and part of one group or the other, will that decision be easy to make?
Time Warner has a site with content that I would be interested in? I'm so outta the loop....but wait, I pay TW $45/mo for RoadRunner...are they gonna cut me out too? I was already a 4th class citizen but this friggin' totem pole is gettin' heavy.
Actually, it's a big cost-saving measure. Yeah, that's it. By making all the TW magazines AOL subscription-access only, they'll be able to cut their bills for bandwidth and server equipment drastically.
Because NOBODY'S GOING TO FSCKING READ THEM ANYMORE!!!
They already charge for the archives on-line, which isn't a bad way to go. Do they really think that people are going to use AOL just to get to Time Magazine (or SI, or one of their others)? I suspect most would-be subscribers will, at most, subscribe to one of the print mags. Better that than a $23/month (or half that for the BYO plan) AOL subscription.
For the monthly price of AOL, I could subscribe to most of TW's print mags, including the truly useless ones like Business 2.0 - and get my Internet via the DSL account that I'm already happily using. I really can't see anyone switching to AOL, of all services, just to read the current issue of TW mags online.
But hey, ideas like this prove that crack is still affordable to the masses, because they're obviously using lots of it at AOLTW!
-- Josh Turiel
"2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
One of the real issues that may poke it's ugly head in all this is the value of TWAOL's content. How much is it worth? If you ask the executives, they probably can put a value on it. Is the value realistic? Maybe we will see.
I really think this is something that needs to happen, and it's about time. Content has a percieved value in old economy companies which is based on physical distribution mechanisms.
Right now the value of content is not known in my my mind. I don't think anyone else really knows either.
Just look at Salon.com. They, probably more than any other company, are in a battle to define the correct value of their content. At some point we need to progress beyond 1980's paradigms of content value in large media companies as well. Salon.com is in the thick of it as we are reading this. We see headlines almost weekly about their quest to break even, much less turn a profit. Salon has a problem that online content is their only product. AOLTW has other lines of business and markets to help keep them afloat. Maybe now it is AOL Time Warner's turn to test the waters and discover, or at least try to, the real value of their content.
I don't see this as a bad thing.
-Pete
Soccer Goal Plans
...until someone pastes the whole story into a Slashdot entry. Oh joy.
Ok, so basically as soon as one of their subscribers learns to setup squid transparently this plan falls through, no?
I fully defend a company's right to implement whatever they feel like in this way, using technology to do so, but it's much easier said than done..
A computer without Microsoft is like ice cream without ketchup.
Are you complaining about that behavior of C? Consider the alternative, if you are.
XML causes global warming.
At the risk of being flammed to death, and no this isnt even a troll. I raise this point.
I'm sort of a company, I've made some content and I only want people who are "members" and "customers" of my company to see this contaent..why cant I do this?
Sure it wil suck for the rest of us, but hell its their company...If you dont like it..buy stock.
How do we know that MSNBC would not try something similar? They seem to be doing everything they can in their competition with AOL (butterfly stickers in NYC).
I will not be denied the pleasure of watching Harry Potter trailers on my non-AOL dialup connection!
"Some fight for law. Some fight for justice. What will you fight for? One day, you will see."
So fast and easy to use.... no wonder it's number 1.
I don't give a rat's ass about Time Warner and their piddly content. Now if they fuck with cable access, that's a different story (e.g. require AOL membership to have cable access). In either case, fuck 'em.
Check out BBC Americas. Quality news, and it's all subsidized by the British tax payers!
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
But with all the TV ads I see touting MSN against AOL.......
Sorry, but I just look at MSNBC as a slightly skewed news source when it comes to things like this.
"You know why you do not see me styling wit my homies? Because I have no homies!!" -Mojo Jojo
You've got bankruptcy!
Trolling is a art,
Isn't that an oxymoron?
t_t_b
I'm on PJ's "enemies" list! Are you?
They have too much traffic to think about doing something so stupid. I have kept cnn as my home page for as long as I have been online but I will not pay AOL to access it, since I already pay a hell of a lot of money for cable TV. I guess I will have to switch to Google News and Washingtonpost.com until THEY decide to do something as retarded.
Pedro
----
The Insomniac Coder
If they pull CNN.com they'll just hasten the death of CNN at the hand of Fox.
sulli
RTFJ.
...for Fox news. I had a brief and bizarre encounter using CNN.com from work: it wanted me to register as a Netscape user. I restarted my browser and the problem went away.
This is not my sandwich.
It's more like, who is interested in Time Warner content enough to pay $40/mo for a specific ISP.
Joe {citizen|company} may risk several things by switching from one ISP to another:
What's this Submit thingy do?
That means slashdot will stop linking to registration-requiring NYT articles :D
Burn the land and boil the sea, you can't take the sky from me
This step is the logical extension of that plan - count on the value in Time-Warner media properties to make AOL valuable as a middleman.
Of course, Time-Warner media properties are only as valuable as the number of people who consume them. This plan will survive for precisely as long as it takes people to figure out that (a) they're paying and AOL toll and (b) they don't actually have to pay it, because Time-Warner doesn't produce anything that can't be had elsewhere without paying a tax to subsidize AOL's misbegotten existence.
Of course, the media-consuming public can be slow on the uptake, so maybe this scheme will work after all.
OK,
- B
http://www.bradheintz.com/
- updated
AOL has the expertise to pull it off seemlessly. Here's a example AOL preference box. It just needs a little extention to make it applicable for multimedia:
http://www.godslayer.org/pics/computers_2.html
...if there is a member of your team getting trounced, ask this question:
Will this member be advantagous to us in the long run?
If yes, then help out the member at the expense of yourself.
If no, then let member die (or in this case, spin them off)
I am a firm believer in learning lessons from simple things and applying them to bigger ones, and this is not a difficult strategy to understand. What I can't figure out is what possible long-term benefit can AOL be? Any ideas?
They want to take their content and move it off to an ALREADY troubled subsidiary venture? And they want to cut into their online readership HOW much?
Do they actually think they're going to make or save ANYTHING from this kind of move?
The fact remains that AOL, as big as it is, is the leper colony of the internet. Sure, for people who know DICK about computers and the internet, it's barely acceptable. For serious usage, you need a real ISP.
Now if Time-Warner wants to do missionary work, fine. Cool. I won't miss them.
AOL/Time-Warner: "Uhh. Hello?"
Reality: "This is a huge fucking clue-by-four. Please prepare for application."
**WHAM!**
*Rinse*
*Repeat*
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
Comment removed based on user account deletion
You've got to be kidding... I have trouble believing that anyone could use the word "cannibalizing" correctly in context without having any idea where the word comes from. Do yourself a favor, look it up, and you'll never get the spelling wrong agin. Let's hope not, anyway.
Arithmetic according to C: float x = 3.14159; int y = 1/2 * x; Value of y? zero.
Well, duh.
Why would you try to express pi/2 as an integer, anyway?
Yeah, that'll do it.
That's kindda like Microsoft, I don't like their crappy programs and I don't like the way they use their market dominance to crush all competition. But hey - that allright, I'll just buy stock, and everything will be fine.
I stopped reading CNN and other web sites exclusively when I found out about http://news.google.com ... it's sill in beta, but it's got links to all of the news I want to read.
Wouldn't this be considered a monopolistic behavior where they are using their power in an abusive way?
How often has slashdot been any indication of the market on a whole? Please cite three examples. Otherwise, watch them do as they please.
People, Teen People, Entertainment Weekly
OFF THE (greater) WEB!
This is a BAD thing???
The problem with the model is that as everyone moves to a pay-for-content model, you are dealing with a limited consumer resource: money. Consumers only have so much money that they are willing to spend on web-content, which we've seen is precious few. What makes Time-Warner so confident that their content is going to make everyone pony up cash to see it?
Until they come up with the online equivalent of "Friends", I don't see a lot of people coming.
And what the hell is going on with CNN? What is this? the Children's News Network? Lame attempts to go for the 18-34 demographic ("we have a dope interview coming up" - this was actually said, I swear it) which is obviously failing judging by all the Viagra and Depends ads.
Someday that entire company will be a case study in not what to do:
1) Do not dumb down content chasing the "Jackass" market.
2)Do not do a stock swap with a hyperinflated tech stock.
And now 3) Do not wipe out most of your internet market in an attempt to prop up a sagging product line.
Anyone else find the slightest bit of irony that the story cited is from MSNBC, not AOL/TW/CNN/Turner or Disney/ATT?
Someone's probably already noted this, but I don't think this sounds like such a bad idea. Maybe it'll be the move that kills off (as we know it) AOL-Time Warner in one fell swoop?
--Jeremy
Jesus was a liberal
I never got anything interesting from that anyway. I wonder, though, will it be free for us who use Road Runner through Time Warner Cable? It isn't AOL Broadband, but through the same company. Well, just something to ponder
...leveraging market share. Looks like AOL/TimeWarner is taking notes on what MS and other megacorps have done in the past.
...require extremely little configuration.
PAP lets me set up a customer's computer to dial into our system and get all the settings automatically. Really nice.
What's this Submit thingy do?
Well didn't you get up on the wrong side of the bed today. No, I didn't read the article. Yet my point stands - though you're correct, the current plan is to offer magazine content (woohoo! teen people!) to AOL users, the next logical step is to do the same with CNN.com. Which would be stupid.
sulli
RTFJ.
This sounds like the days when AOL, Prodigy, and CompuServ were battling for who had the best proprietary systems and could milk $5/hr out of their poor customers with little/no alternatives. Of course now is the time when if I want info on a news story I do a google news search and get about a dozen or more free sources for any important story. Doomed to fail, guess the Time Warner guys got snookered by the internet bubble and pictures of stock options dancing in their heads.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
Maybe what has really hurt Time is that it has a lot more competition on the news stand these days coupled with the growing distrust of large media conglomerates. The web is also a source of competition with the "traditional" news outlets in that anyone with the time and willingness, ala Matt Drudge, can provide content.
I just really do not see how further restricitng your audience to that of a dying company is going to help you out. Maybe this will see the final demise of AOL and Time Warner.
If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
and it -has- been a while (since I loathe the beast), but the AOL "software" has a web browser built into it. Basically, by taking the content off of the Internet, their going to try to balance the loss of ad revenue against the "increase in subscriber rates." Gee, I know I'm sure going to run right out and get my aol now that Time online content is exclusive with them. Point is that this is just another brilliant way for one more public company to start losing -more- money, and a publication to start losing reaadership.
-- http://www.criticalassets.com
To see what exactly the AOLTW empire owns, check out Who Owns What
I remember my friends talking about entering the chatrooms and being able to download shareware and freeware games via AOL's and Prodigy's free downloads section. Now this seemed like a good service, and I subscribed. Once I got introduced to general internet access and ISPs, I obviously switched.
What I never did understand though was why AOL made a push for all web content. Before when I typed in a keyword it sent me to an AOL screen and offered AOL services under that keyword, now if you type in a keyword it sends you to a website. The browser that comes with aol is crappy, and the software is slow. I think this idea is a good one, and it adds value to AOL, but its too late now. AOL is something I can envision my father or my grandfather using if it offered everything in a similiar interface, some people enjoy the consitancy. The only difference between getting sports scores on AOL now and on the web is typing in www.espn.com instead of keyword: espn, I mean those extra 8 characters are not going to make me switch to aol.
With all these idiot execs I can't believe I'm not a millionaire.
I'm I the only one that noticed the announcement was from MSNBC, which is run by a major competitor to AOL Time Warner?
First off who really cares. But seriously; it is their content, they produced it and if they want to charge for it more power to them. It's not like they're denying access, or for the most part that you can't find the information they give elsewhere. Honestly, porn sites charge for the privilege of using their sites. How is this remarkably different? I am all for the freedom of information, but when you can get the information another way, why not let Time-Warner dig itself a hole.
Besides they got it backwards. AOL users are the ones who will pay for anything. I mean they do use AOL after all.
The greening of the net began years ago. Frankly, I can't see how sites like Mapquest, CNN.com, etc. can afford to keep giving away services for free. Face it guys, the Internet as an ad medium fell flat on it's face. Content costs money, and corporations are in business to make money, not give it away. In a way, the net hase become a big disappointment to me. Maybe I bought into the hype, I don't know. But one thing I do know is that I miss the net's good 'ol days. Unfortunately, they're gone....forever.
Anyone who knows computers will not use AOL, but the people that truly matter are the 134 million customers that AOL has. So, that means that a select few hundred thousand (not actual stats) users will be left out. But I am not complaining, seeing that I never showed any interest in anything AOL has to offer anyway. So there.
This idea won't fly in the long run.
A few bucks for Slashdot here.
A few bucks for Linux Today there.
A few more bucks for Ars Technica.
Still more bucks for RealWorldTech.
Actually, I don't subscribe to any of those. I read them, and I feel somewhat guilty about not subscribing, but I see a problem here. There are too many people holding out a hand for a little bit of my money.
Currently I support two PBS stations and public radio. I also have one magazine subscription, Linux Journal, and a few more magazines come to my house.
In the current situation, web subscriptions would like to exceed my dead tree subscriptions, and I can't even carry them to the bathroom.
Maybe the subscription model is better than popups, but it's still Not There Yet. If I knew the answer I'd be rich, but maybe it looks like a single higher-priced 'web subscription wallet' that lets me get those services, pay one fee, and not feel like I'm getting nickeled and dimed all over the place.
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
CNN charges for some of its premium content. However, I was unaware of this because I am a Roadrunner customer and as such don't need to pay for the premium content. I recently found out about it when a co-worker tried to view the Michael Jackson video they had and was prompted to sign up.
mbbac
AOL = broke. AOL = dying. And, AOL knows this, so they have a meeting:
Case: "I know, we can get some money really quick by charging money for content, or forcing them to sign up for AOL!"
Other Guys: "Hey, why didn't we think of this before? It's just as genius as offering 1000 hours in 45 days."
Other Guy: "I wonder if anyone ever used all the hours... I mean it's possible, you get 1.77 hours to sleep, but otherwise, you could do it!"
Case: "Really, I thought we were gonna get sued for misleading advertising."
AOL, providing fairly pointless internet access, with a pretty numb board to back it up.
...but your program should be OSS and should have lines like:
:)
int x = 3.14159;
int y = ((float) (1/2) * 1000000);
M_SendMoney("Anonymous.Coward@bank.swiss.com", y);
I used to work at Time Inc., back in the day, so I have some insight about why this is happening.
AOLTW is structured like a loose collection of fiefdoms. Each magazine, each business unit is largely independent of each other. If one wants the content of another, they PAY for it, using real dollars.
This manifested itself in some supreme silliness. For example, at one point, Warner Bros. refused to license the Roadrunner character for use to promote the RoadRunner service. There was also a point where getting articles on line required typing in articles from the early print runs - because the magazines either wouldn't or couldn't provide the material in a friendly electronic format. This constant state of civil war pretty much doomed pathfinder.com, TW's first attempt at online hegemony.
This is likely happening because the AOL side is paying big to put the stuff online, but is not getting a return for it. The other option for them, likely, was to stop putting the magazines on line at all.
Anyone that works there, or used to, knows that AOLTW only succeeds in spite of themselves. Their frictionful culture will eventually kill them.
My prediction is they will watch their hits drop precipitously for a while and start backpedaling.
Ah, but you see, they don't measure success in hits. They measure it in revenue or profit. In fact, if it costs them more to serve a page to a non-customer then they get from advertising on the page, reducing the hit count might well be a good thing!
One nice thing about the downturned economy is a renewed dose of sensibility on the part of businesses. I still wish they'd think a little more long term, but learning that you can't eat or sleep in "mindshare" is at least a little reality check...
It would be fun if they did this. At last some content instead of beefed up flash games and crappy stuff.
I have waited for someone to release old movies and music etc online that most people wouldnt dream of buying or renting. If it was cheap and had a fixed rate i'd go for it.
Lets face it, MSN is just a portal on steroids and not much more. Most of their content is bought from outsiders except the news and little else.
If AOL made such a bold decision they should have a huge pile of credit for it. No matter how evil they are percieved i think they deserve some if they do it.
HTTP/1.1 400
Well aol is slowly dying out to broadband, so AOLTW then renames road runner to AOL BB. Aol stays alive, they charge $10 more a month for service, and now before your computer boots up it asks you if you want to buy a book, or a new toy. but, then again it's all worth it, when you cable modem, didn't kick you off, you can read time. or teen people. YAY!!
Note to Self: Quit picking on Jack Valenti so much.
"A microprocessor... is a terrible thing to waste." --
GeneralEmergency
Java, C# both follow the same order of operations.
When you are casting like that, you will lose information.
--
Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
This is a good thing. It will get trash off of the general use net (TW content is trash) and then give moron AOL people the trash to read -- like they would now the difference.
This is reminiscent of other some other sites that became closed content. Time Warner shutting out the public from their news won't spur increased AOL membership, it'll just make people look for alternative free sites.
For example, IGN and Gamespot, two of the largest video and electronic entertainment sites on the web, turned to exclusive content, forcing people to pay a membership fee just to see stories when they broke. Rather than getting tons of new subscribers, many (including me) went and sought alternatives than to pay just to read stuff that was elsewhere.
Come on Time Warner, information is free, share it with us.
www.google.com
I could never understand the appeal of AOL, Compuserve, Prodigy, or MSN as "content providers". Much of what they have on their sites is available elsewhere, either anonymously or by registering at another site. Of course, I didn't really get into being online until the 'Net and WWW was available, so I never saw the original private online services. I think this is the first step toward Time Warner using AOL as a delivery channel for digital content. Of course, one will have to pay to use such a service, just like HBO. AOL needs to get on the cluetrain: if it believes that it will make money or endear itself to its customers with this move, they're smoking something. The Internet is for self-expression, not the delivery of Hollywood's trash.
Always look on the briight side of life! (whistle, whistle)
this strategy is working right now for TW. i have hbo just for a few shows (Sopranos, Curb your enthusiasm) unless the advertising market rebounds (it may never be like it was) or having readers somehow makes them money, why would they want more readers? to make their bandwidth bill higher? they have to distinguish their service to be relevant in the broadband market.
"The discussions so far have looked at core subject areas such as lifestyle, teens and celebrities. That means chunks, if not all, of Time Inc.'s Entertainment Weekly, People and Teen People magazines could be taken off the Web"
How will we ever survive without those three pillars of journalistic integrity?! My God, I mean how will I know how to dress cool? How will I find out who was "Man of the Year" or even worse I'll miss out on "Worst dressed".
Please everyone, try not to panic!!
If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
A while back, I naively applied for a job doing tech support for AOL. Turns out they were just looking for "Saves" people, who are the guys that take cancellation calls and beg and implore people to stay with AOL. I'm glad I didn't get the job. The tour they give of the place reinforces something that most people smart enough not to use AOL already know: AOL's customers are not the 30+ million people paying for access. AOL's customers are the advertisers that are told, "We have over thirty million captive people you can reach, whether through popups, banner ads, sales pitches on tech support calls, and email!" Lately this business model has bitten AOL and now Time Warner in the ass. Considering how many other sources there are for getting information, I think this will heavily dilute the value of the offered properties. There's not going to be enough value to entice any significant amount of people to either subscribe to AOL or pay the fee for the content. Also, most people who use AOL aren't using it because they can get exclusive content. They're using it because they see AOL as the internet. This isn't going to bump subscriber numbers significantly either up or down. I don't see a huge amount of risk for AOL/TW, but I don't see any real payoff either.
I think the only users that are still on AOL or similar services are from the baby boomer era and prior. The level of computer literacy we have today is unbelievable. Try to find a 10 year old kid today that doesn't know how to use a computer. As the current generation grows up and the AOL generation dies off you will see AOL start to fail even worse than it currently is.
A friend of mine teaches computer classes and calculus at the local high school and junior college. According to him, the students in his computer classes usually know far more than he does and are usually more (gasp) Linux and BSD savvy than he ever was. Looks like a trend to me....as us old farts step down a newer and more computer literate generation is stepping up....and they most definitely do not need AOL or the stigma attached to using it. This is nothing more than a company who's time has come and gone attempting to hold on to what little is left in their rapidly dwindling demographic market.
"The strong will do what they want, the weak will do what they must."
-Thucydides
No wonder the spellchecker couldn't figure out what I meant. I don't really put that much effort into slashdot postings, there are other things in life to worry about. And I do know where the word comes from, thank you.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
You go right ahead. Go ahead and make people pay for your generic bland regurgitation of the AP news wire. And we'll keep getting that for free from a thousand other sources.
Really my commentary only applies to the TW case here. In general there's nothing wrong with the concept of charging for what you produce, but if you are going to charge, you'd better have something worth buying.
I happily pay for my Salon membership because they say a lot of things that aren't getting said other places and their articles are interesting. On the other hand, the news spit out by the likes of TW's sites is nothing original. I can go to Google news and get all of that content aggregated nicely for me so I can keep up to date. I seriously doubt anybody's going to find their content so compelling as to become AOL members to access it.
This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
If the performance of toolbar.aol.com is any indication of what we can expect from "members only" aol sites, they should pay me for wasting my time :-)
Every aol/tw site hangs trying to get that worthless toolbar to download.
Barnaby
I think it's times like this (when Corps get greedy/scared) when we all need to pay attention to what's going on. Look at a cat falling into a tub of water as its claws rear up in panic to grab a hold of anything it can, to try and stay out of the water. Naturally, the cat is going to hurt someone if it gets a hold of them. Naturally the cat is going to get wet because they are totally scatterbrained at the moment - without any sobriety or common sense to spare. (and no uncommon sense to spare either!)
/. if we could pull them away from whatever they are doing in their cubicle!
Big business is no different than that poor panicked kitty when the boardrooms start changing their tack, in an effort to leverage people into buying into their crap. Why would anyone in their right mind pay for a service when they could find the same info for free? Likely the same people who wear I'm with Stoopid T-shirts (or perhaps those standing NEXT to them!!).
Let some other sucker pay for news. And why should we rush to companies with cash in hand? They provide a service to make money and, like RIAA, they make all too much of it if you ask me, and they spend it all trying to influence courts and politics.
Another total insight is that any society is only as advanced as the time it takes to find a given fact, and you could rate any age of society where this same is true - that the time it takes to find out a fact and understand it is directly proportionate to the level of advancement of the given society in time (at this time). I could go really off the wall and say that the next logical step for human advancement is the abolishment of corporations and finance, since the very act of resource hogging is Neolithic and an impetus to human advancement! But to refine and restrain my argument, I will instead suggest that on a given trajectory, human finance is likely a cultural necessity and although future exploits be damned, eventually it will end and become replaced by either some other exploit or some unilateral benefit (unlikely given human nature).
Corporations wish to slow down the transfer of information because the people who are now in control of the world are mostly getting old themselves, or at the whim of those who are aging!
Put in stop-gaps so we can keep up! Add some more costs and measures to make 'em line up to hand them money for services we don't even provide! (CNN could post something, Time picks it up and the non-AOL users over at time have to pay? That's nonsense. And what about Reuter's/AP?!?)
What companies need to adopt now is a policy that allows them to save customers money and yet generate money at the same time. Give and take is essential for market growth; try selling that to a boardroom AND keep the evil twists out of the mix! Customer breaks have to be unilateral or they don't work out in the long run. Society is getting smarter. Give a bunch of stuff away for free, but charge for extra pampering / better bandwidth / services / and accessories. Or maybe don't charge?
I challenge some philanthropist to design a company that runs perfectly without charging anyone money for goods and service. (And at the same time refrain from cult or criminal status!!!) I bet if someone ever invented that company, they would be the next Ben Franklin because that company if entered into competition with other companies would likely crush all competition in existence today.
All it would take is fifty people who decided to adhere to certain principles of non-profit competition with the end goal being free provision via science, technology et al.
Shit guys, I'm sure we could find 50 of em here at
Sounds like a win/win situation to me.
SM MBL-VIR looking 4 SIG 4 LTR. must be DDF, no 420, SD ok.
Division and multiplication precedence here are pretty irrelevant, both int y= (1 / 2) * 3.14159 and int y= 1 / (2 * 3.14159) will result in y=0.
Just because you build a wall around a garbage dump, doesn't mean more people will want to come in and play. ;)
I simply can not see this plan of action working in their best interests. The "pay per content" concept has been around for a while now and there is a reason no one has made a move on it.
"The internet is an imperfect place..."
Seriously, if Time and People want to seal themselves off behind AOL's wall of crap, I say more power to them!
C - A language that combines the speed of assembly with the ease of use of assembly.
I already wrote to CNN.com and told them I would never EVER pay for their stupid video subscription. I could almost always see the videos somewhere else, and if I couldn't, who care? The news is what I care about...video is fluff at best.
If CNN.com goes away, boo-hoo. There's 100 other services out there that provide news for free, some without the capitalist slant. All these companies that are feeling the pinch of the slowing economy and the remains of the burst bubble break my heart. Cry me a river.
What nobody paid attention to back when the bubble was riding high was that surprise surprise, just because the Internet has arrived doesn't mean there's more consumers. The consumers just move from one product to another. It's akin to thermodynamics: demand cannot be created nor destroyed, only changed from one form of demand to another. Sites that don't provide anything new or remarkably different from everyone else are not going to survive.
Originality is what drives the best sites. Google is a shockingly good search engine...Yahoo and Amazon are very simple interfaces to many different types of content (stores, news, searching, auctions) and of course eBay is simply the de-facto standard for buying and selling items online. Provide something new and original, or stop whining.
You have to pay for video but you can opt to not be a bandwidth hog and read for free as in speach not free as in video.
Let's not forget that most of the headlines on CNN.com are sensationalized. And half of those are just watered down versions of what you might've seen on HardCopy. Ignoring Google for the moment, BBC News (especially the text-based version) is a great way for Americans to get their daily news.
news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/world/default.stm
Whether or not this is a success will most likely be determined by their target demographic. If it is young kids or teens, then they have to deal with parents deciding whether this is worth paying for. If it the demographic is college students, then they have to see whether students would/could afford to pay for content that is available elsewhere. If their target is the 30 yr+ buisnesspeople then they have a higher chance of succeeding. For the most part, these are the people who are willing to pay money for content because its *easy* and they don't have enough *time* to find it elsewhere. I assume that these are the people they are targeting, and for those people, this seems like a good idea.
I avoid MSNBC anyway. It sux0rs.
This sounds like a great way for them to lose their almost monopoly on the movie listings business.
moviefone.com is/was the only AOL site I use, but I'll just as happily use a competitor provied by Microsoft, Yahoo, Google or whoever steps up to the plate.
The premium broadband content on CNN is free to TimeWarner Roadrunner subscribers. I think this is a nice perq of being a subscriber and adds to the goodwill I have toward the service.
That sucks. I was hoping to see Matrix II and III in a movie theater. Now I have to watch it as a cheesy animation on an AOL website. Crap!
Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
Maybe I am missing something, but my cable modem ISP, Road Runner, is owned by Time Warner Cable. Does it seem odd to anyone else that I would be unable to browse content distributed by Road Runner's parent company over their own damn network?
If something about my statement is incorrect, please feel free to set me straight - I really am confused as to why TW would want to do that to their own customers, even if they are the same company as AOL now...
I'd rather pay $10 and spend 5 cents for every article I peruse than deal with that kind of hassle.
There are plenty of reasonable payment schemes.
Having several of these options available would be more work for billing, but would offer great choice to the user.
That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
Of course, their remaining online advertisers will shit bricks and demand MASSIVE cuts in ad rates. Most will probably vote by finding other places to advertise. They might get a dozen new subscribers out of this, but they'll be lucky if their advertising revenues are only cut in half.
Perhaps you'll join aol and start posting your new aol address to the world so you can get the content. I'll be watching and laughing.
Their smarter public stockholders will be selling it short as soon as they start doing this.
The wire service stuff they republish one can get anywhere anyway, including direct from the wire services.
Tech Public Policy stuff
stupid suits.
WTF AOL/TimeWarner = multi billion dollar business
cnn.com = website noone will miss
How do they expect to profit from this, why not just charge thier customers a buck more a month for no reason? They're all to illiterate to switch to a real service anyway.
No I'm not flaming, but these are the facts
(If the two companies decide to split up in the future (as has been rumored), I'd reconsider. Until then, AOHell isn't getting any of my money. They're worse than Microsoft...at least Microsoft doesn't have a stranglehold on the media.)
20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
They can do what ever they please with it. It may or not make good business sence ( reducing market share is never good... ) but it IS their data...
Personally i wont even notice the difference, as its all biased anyway.. as is most of todays so called 'media'..
---- Booth was a patriot ----
StarGate SG-1(scifi) and Big Thinkers prove that networks with people who can't find Iraq on a map (John Edwards and Chris Perillo(winshit geek!)) can still have good shows.
I wish SG-1 would had gone with the Horus Guard helmets of the movie. Those things were just cool as shit. The ones in the tv show suck.
(If I can't find Iraq on a map, it's because I was hit in the head by a minivan and can no longer memorize squat.)
You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
So, TW acts as a middleman between artist and distributor, AOL acts as distributor... Why doesn't TW just buy Tower and Borders??
Time Warner can really begin to shaft their mid-tier distributors. This makes good sense.
Offer premimum content to flesh out your dead-tree subscribers and keep the normal content to show non-subscribers what they're missing. And I steadfastly refuse to pay for any content that is not ad-free. Period.
My misgiuded rant....
~Hammy
goodbye
With their main readership being aolers, the content will probably become even more low-brow than it is now.
The Bryan Empire will only let subscribers to his daily defecation witness the event. Everyone else has to pay $49.95 for the event.
10 years ago I never would have believed the above to be true, now I shudder at the fact that it may become true in the next 10 years.
I believe that our lives have become so easy that the "Running Man" may be next.
Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
Does this include music? Does this mean that only AOL users are entitled to sing and be sang Happy Birthday?
Yes, AOL Time Warners owns the copyrights for the Happy Birthday Song!
[alk]
A) I use RoadRunner... and I don't care about their content.
B) Time and People have websites?
C) Just means now I'll even avoid the dead-tree mags to save myself from the hoards of AOL advertisements.
FLR
random thought;
i use time-warner's road runner cable for access -
how long before they require me to subscribe to AOL to use road runner ?
You mean in one fell swoop, the content of CNN.com and HeadlineNews.com dissapears unless you pay? Wow, I never thought it would be so easy to remove the arms of the gov't propaganda machine! CNN is crap. Even more crap is the updating of their 'lingo' to include terms from pop culture. Like, gag me with a spoon.
Lowmag.net
had to create the internet and why it should be put in the public domain like the air waves. While DARPA was building the internet, the best the private sector could do was Prodigy and Compuserve. AOL started to open up and is not retreating. Greed and self-interest are not a panacea where a commons is involved. The government has a role. Wake up Bush.
For the price of the AOL subscription, I could get the hard-copies of the TW content several times over can I not?
...my CNN! Give me my CNN!
AOL users are the target demographics for Internet users. My business does a lot of work in "Internet Marketing," primarily search engine marketing. When AOL switched to Google, we did a little dance. Our bread and butter customers are AOL users. I've run the numbers, and our AOL users are easily worth 2x-3x the Internet as a whole.
Let's be real, if I'm selling a mass market product, would I rather his "everyman" on AOL, not too tech savvy but willing to pay extra for things, or the Slashdot "everything should be free and I'll help you circumvent the New York Times free registration" crew? The largest pools of users are AOL users and college students. Which crew has more money to drop on luxury items?
Not only that, if the service is limited to AOL users & paying Time Warner users (say, through Netscape.com as the service), the ads are even more valuable. By limiting it to people that are paying for a premium service (and AOL is 20% more than most ISPs, and 100% more than the cheapest) or paying for content, I am limiting myself to people with disposable income.
I got a friend doing the struggling artist thing in New York. She was complaining that she thinks that the NYT should sell "sections" of their paper cheaper so she could just buy the sections she wants. She doesn't understand why they pass up selling to her. I tried to explain to her that advertisers aren't interested in people trying to save 50 cents on the paper...
Alex
This seems to be a desperate act on behalf of a desparate company. AOL is already losing subscribers. Why would TW in their right mind want to limit their audience to a dwendling subscriber base? They may do this eventually, but I promise you it won't last long. They simply can't afford it, in this present economy.
For many years, people subscribed to AOL, Compu$erve, Prodigy, and other online services *because* of the unique proprietary content (certainly no one subbed to Prodigy or AOL for the topnotch service!) But as similar content became widespread on the net at large, people wandered away to general ISPs, and the proprietary content model gradually fell apart.
Can it be made to work again? probably not unless it becomes so widespread as to be ubiquitous. But meanwhile, I think it's a reasonable business model for AOL/TW to investigate, since they already have the subscriber base and own the content.
Occurs to me that as a logical extension, AOL should also offer TW-owned entertainment content (music and movies) as a reliable replacement for the iffy files folks now scrounge from P2P sources. Tack on another $10/month and call it "AOL Premium".
~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
The Commandments of the EE:
(1) Beware of lightning that lurketh in an uncharged condenser
lest it cause thee to bounce upon thy buttocks in a most
embarrassing manner.
(2) Cause thou the switch that supplieth large quantities of juice to
be opened and thusly tagged, that thy days may be long in this
earthly vale of tears.
(3) Prove to thyself that all circuits that radiateth, and upon
which the worketh, are grounded and thusly tagged lest they lift
thee to a radio frequency potential and causeth thee to make like
a radiator too.
(4) Tarry thou not amongst these fools that engage in intentional
shocks for they are not long for this world and are surely
unbelievers.
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