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Here at adequacy we have noticed that some people out there on the
internet have a hatred for AOL. Why do they have this hatred? We can
only assume that it is because AOL'ers are normal people with
normal interests, and furthermore that AOL is a commercial
company with normal motivations diametrically opposed to the libertarian
roots of the Internet. In short, there are a lot of elitists out
there who hate AOL because it gave internet access to millions.
Now adequacy.org gives you the real deal about AOL and shows you why we should all thank this ISP for making the internet what it is today. |
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First of all, imagine the internet without AOL. I remember this myself
- I once used it for a few weeks back in 1992, and it was like a desert, boring and dry. It was populated almost entirely by
academics and computer nerds of the worst sort, and it was difficult
to find places on the internet (what little there was of it) regarding
exciting, varied pastimes.
Enter AOL AOL swept all of this away. By giving access to millions of normal Americans, AOL made the internet far more diverse. Now, if I want to talk to people who don't define themselves as geeks, but as normal people with normal interests, it is easy to do so. No longer is the internet the province of white, middle class computer nerds, a place of arcane knowledge. Everybody can use it, everyone has a place. This makes it millions of times more interesting to browse, there is a lot more varied information, and varied people. Whether I want to find out about bondage from a 25 year professional, ice skating, journalism, gerbil breeding, music composition, oil painting, it is just a matter of visiting google and reading the information. So why does AOL get such a bad press in certain demographics? Could it be jealousy? Or a repugnant, smug feeling of superiority? I would argue yes. The simple fact is that the only people who dislike AOL are certain geeks. They hate it because AOL has ruined their little ivory tower for them, and "stolen" the internet clean away. They see the internet as theirs to do with as they please, and it galls them that AOL dare come along and empower the varied masses, destroying the hegemony of the geeks by making the internet easy for everyone. I find this despicably selfish of them. These people could be fighting for causes that actually matter, but instead they get upset about trivialities out of snobbishness. AOL has done the world a service by enfranchising the average person (average in the sense of "average technological knowledge" - in this sense, a talented classical composer or sublime novelist might be "average"), and yet because these average people have no interest in Linux, haven't heard about the DMCA and such obscure causes, and faithfully vote democrat, republican or green instead of for some extremist political fringe organisation they are lambasted by the oh-so-smug-and-superior-aren't-we geeks. Geeks also hate AOL because they live lifes of social rejection, I suspect. They try to rationalise this by thinking they just have "high standards", and think they have no friends because they are so misunderstood and can't find people who think like them. This means that they naturally become insufferable elitists, exacerbating their own problems. So how were they to react when a tide of perhaps naive but friendly people burst onto the net in 1993? One might have thought they would have welcomed such varied people. Perhaps they couldn't write a unix shell script, but they knew how to make a marriage work and how to change a diaper - essential life skills of far more relevance than programming a texas instruments graphics calculator. If only the natives of the net at that time had been more friendly, more open minded, perhaps a great coming together would have happened, and the geeks would have learned about the world beyond their keyboards and how to live in it. But noooo, they had to be all "1337", and reject the influx, and pretend to be superior to a group of people of far more interest, experience and friendliness than the geeks ever could be. Why are AOL #1? Lets review:
AOL do their best to help the community. They have a special AOL Time-Warner Foundation, who's goals are to "[Use] the power of media, communications and information technology to serve the public interest and strengthen society." This wonderful, altruistic foundation saves the lives of many children each and every year, by equipping children for the 21st century, extending internet benefits to all (a classic AOL goal), engaging communities in the Arts and empowering citizens and civic participation. How can anyone oppose such goals? Search me, better ask a geek. They are often unjustly criticised for their success. Many a liberatarian, music stealing geek has attacked AOL self righteously claiming it has a monopoly. This is so much nonsense. AOL is big, for sure, but it is big for a reason - it is big because it is good. It does not have a monopoly though, for there are plenty of other ISP's out there. Also, vertical integration is a good thing for the end user. Only with AOL can you get the content of Time Warner filtered through an ISP then squirted down AOL owned wires to your cable modem at the end. AOL simplifies things for everyone - why use more than one company at once? Do you have a "telephone provider" and a "telephone access provider" and a "telephone power provider" and a "telephone content provider"? No, you use one company, and choose it carefully. AOL have realised that the internet was too complicated to use before, and made the whole process as simple and easy as using a telephone. What can possibly be wrong with that?
As I look at the wonderful variety of the net today, I thank God for
AOL. AOL is the internet, in a metaphorical sense, and AOL'ers are the salt of
the Earth, to be celebrated for making the internet have relevance
to the rest of the world. Sure, the natives should get some credit for
designing the infrastructure, but AOL'ers as a group deserve far more
for providing the content. |