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Word: aol (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...logged on to America Online, Dave Cassell was a struggling technical writer intoxicated by the potential of Net life. "I was bleary-eyed and buzzed about the future," he says. "I saw all of humanity coming online." Then one day our hero experienced some of that humanity, in an AOL chat room, where a lesbian and a Christian Fundamentalist were bashing each other. Cassell ended up disgusted--not by the name calling but by AOL's Victorian censorship policy, which resulted in a chat-room monitor summarily booting the lesbian for uttering the word bitch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHY AOL IS STILL THE PITS | 9/22/1997 | See Source »

...world's largest online service also "supported" a large online anti-AOL club, especially out on the unvarnished stretches of the Net, where folks tend to be anti-censorship and anti-corporate. Cassell discovered them in a fledgling Usenet newsgroup called alt.aol-sucks that he turned into a personal crusade. His gang of malcontents anticipates the demise of the online-service provider as avidly as Rastafarians await the return of King Haile Selassie I. And slowly his anti-AOL avocation has blossomed into a career; Cassell, 34, now supports himself and his cat Tribble almost exclusively by writing about AOL...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHY AOL IS STILL THE PITS | 9/22/1997 | See Source »

While it was good for his business, Cassell took the news hard last week that the AOL empire was hardly crumbling--and was in fact sucking up 2 million CompuServe users and closing down another portal to the Net. "I'm in denial," he grouses. "CompuServe were the good guys...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHY AOL IS STILL THE PITS | 9/22/1997 | See Source »

...slow E-mail delivery and frequent busy signals is really of "the food stinks and the portions are too small" variety. Cassell tries to dig up meatier bones. He's written about the abuse of those ubiquitous "Five Hours Free!" diskettes that flood the mail. He's written about AOL hackers and AOHell, a program that helps delinquents steal members' passwords. And he's chronicled the AOL censorship policy that led to the banning of more than 100 words from chat-room names, from breasts to boy. On AOL, says Cassell, "even the word forbidden is forbidden." His first-ever...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHY AOL IS STILL THE PITS | 9/22/1997 | See Source »

Sometimes, though, good things come in bad diskettes. When AOL crashed for 19 hours last August, Cassell wrote a takeoff of the classic Don McLean tune, which he titled Bye, Bye Amer'ca Online. ("So bye bye to Amer'ca Online/ Drove my modem to a domain and it's working just fine./ And good old geeks are cheering users offline/ Saying this'll be the day that they die.") Like most amusing online spore, it flew around the Net, causing a number of people to E-mail Cassell their thanks. One of them became Cassell's live-in girlfriend...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHY AOL IS STILL THE PITS | 9/22/1997 | See Source »

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