Yeah, Like this will actually reach Mr. Case. AOL probably has a mail filter that goes something like this: stevecase@aol.com > /dev/null I don't mind if AO(Hel)L buys RedHat. Maybe they will learn something. Or maybe an influx of personnel with moral aptitude would boost corporation-wide morality ('course I'm speaking executives here). Hey! It could happen. Besides Redhat isn't all there is to Linux. And having a big nasty corporation pushing Linux against M$ might actually help user acceptance. 'course downside is, might actually cause forking of the kernel. I can see the beginnings of that already. Mandrake fork, Redhat fork, Torvalds (aka official) fork. > -----Original Message----- > From: DCT Jared Smith [mailto:jared@dctkc.com] > Sent: Tuesday, February 05, 2002 9:33 AM > To: stevecase@aol.com > Cc: kclug@kclug.org > Subject: I remember when AOL first began > > > Dear Steve Case: > > I remember when AOL first began. I remember reading your > personal e-mails to > your earliest subscribers. I recommended your company to a > few friends, and > then quit doing so several years ago, for the following reason: > > Trying to make my website readable in all browsers, I > recently installed > Netscape 4.79, thinking I would get a bare-bones browser from > the 1990s, > with maybe a few enhancements. Instead, I got the whole AOL > experience: > > Via this installation, America Online dropped seven links > onto my desktop, > two links into my QuickLaunch bar, one link into my System > Tray, several > links into my Start Menu, a handful of links strewn > throughout my Internet > Explorer favorites section, it installed RealPlayer (which is > known for > tracking users) without asking, > somehow I've got a cookie to AOL without ever going to your > site, and there > are at least three advertisements you've dropped onto my computer. > > All of this without asking, under the guise of a simple Netscape > installation. > > In 14 years of Internet experience, AOL still has the record > for being the > single most intrusive software I ever installed. Makes > Microsoft look like a > friend. What's up with that? > > Please reconsider your policy of taking over your user's > computers. Some of > us do not want to track down every little AOL particle and > remove it, simply > because we made the mistake of installing Netscape 4.79. I > have found this > to be the case with anything remotely related to AOL. > > Perhaps you are unaware of this. You have created a class of > users who will > never use your software, and will recommend to anyone who > asks us... to go > elsewhere. > > I am sorry that you bought Netscape. Please fix it, or write back and > explain why you do this. If you want to buy Red Hat, you've > simply got to be > more humble. > > -Jared > > > > > majordomo@kclug.org >