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- From: aa@iti.org (Aayush Asthana)
- Subject: Prodigy stumbles -- reproduced with permission
- Message-ID: <aa.727724970@hela.iti.org>
- Keywords: Prodigy, news
- Sender: usenet@iti.org (Hela USENET News System)
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- Organization: Industrial Technology Institute
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 17:49:30 GMT
- Lines: 410
-
- Just thought this would be of interest to this group; what follows
- is an article posted on: comp.org.eff.news
- on: Wed, 23 Oct 1991 23:10:02 GMT
- by: rita@eff.org (Rita Marie Rouvalis)
- who has permitted this :
- PRODIGY STUMBLES AS A FORUM ... AGAIN
- By Mike Godwin
- to be posted with proper source attribution.
-
- --entire article follows; some header lines deleted---
-
- Article: 44 of comp.org.eff.news
- Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.news,comp.org.eff.talk
- From: rita@eff.org (Rita Marie Rouvalis)
- Subject: Article 6--Prodigy stumbles again as a forum
- Sender: rita@eff.org (Rita Marie Rouvalis)
- Organization: The Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Date: Wed, 23 Oct 1991 23:10:02 GMT
- Approved: rita@eff.org
- Lines: 100
-
-
- PRODIGY STUMBLES AS A FORUM ... AGAIN
- By Mike Godwin
-
-
- On some days, Prodigy representatives tell us they're running "the Disney
- Channel of online services." On other days the service is touted as a
- forum for "the free expression of ideas." But management has missed the
- conflict between these two missions. And it is just this unperceived
- conflict that has led the B'nai B'rith's Anti-Defamation League to launch
- a protest against the online service..
-
-
- On one level, the controversy stems from Prodigy's decision to censor
- messages responding to claims that, among other things, the Holocaust
- never took place. These messages--which included such statements as
- "Hitler had some valid points" and that "wherever Jews exercise influence
- and power, misery, warfare and economic exploitation ... follow"--were the
- sort likely to stir up indignant responses among Jews and non-Jews alike.
- But some Prodigy members have complained to the ADL that when they tried
- to respond to both the overt content of these messages and their implicit
- anti-Semitism, their responses were rejected by Prodigy's staff of
- censors.
-
-
- The rationale for the censorship? Prodigy has a policy of barring messages
- directed at other members, but allows messages that condemn a group. The
- result of this policy, mechanically applied, is that one member can post a
- message saying that "pogroms, 'persecutions,' and the mythical holocaust"
- are things that Jews "so very richly deserve" (this was an actual
- message). But another member might be barred from posting some like
- "Member A's comments are viciously anti-Semitic." It is no wonder that the
- Anti-Defamation League is upset at what looks very much like unequal
- treatment.
-
-
- But the problem exposed by this controversy is broader than simply a badly
- crafted policy. The problem is that Prodigy, while insisting on its Disney
- Channel metaphor, also gives lip service to the notion of a public forum.
- Henry Heilbrunn, a senior vice president of Prodigy, refers in the Wall
- Street Journal to the service's "policy of free expression," while Bruce
- Thurlby, Prodigy's manager of editorial business and operations, invokes
- in a letter to ADL "the right of individuals to express opinions that are
- contrary to personal standards or individual beliefs."
-
-
- Yet it is impossible for any free-expression policy to explain both the
- allowing of those anti-Semitic postings and the barring of responses to
- those postings from outraged and offended members. Historically, this
- country has embraced the principle that best cure for offensive or
- disturbing speech is more speech. No regime of censorship--even of the
- most neutral and well-meaning kind--can avoid the kind of result that
- appears in this case: some people get to speak while others get no chance
- to reply. So long as a board of censors is in place, Prodigy is no public
- forum.
-
-
- Thus, the service is left in a double bind. If Prodigy really means to be
- taken as a computer-network version of "the Disney Channel"--with all the
- content control that this metaphor implies--then it's taking
- responsibility for (and, to some members, even seeming to endorse) the
- anti-Semitic messages that were posted. On the other hand, if Prodigy
- really regards itself as a forum for free expression, it has no business
- refusing to allow members to respond to what they saw as lies,
- distortions, and hate. A true free-speech forum would allow not only the
- original messages but also the responses to them.
-
-
- So, what's the fix for Prodigy? The answer may lie in replacing the
- service's censors with a system of "conference hosts" of the sort one sees
- on CompuServe or on the WELL. As WELL manager Cliff Figallo conceives of
- his service, the management is like an apartment manager who normally
- allows tenants to do what they want, but who steps in if they do something
- outrageously disruptive. Hosts on the WELL normally steer discussions
- rather than censoring them, and merely offensive speech is almost never
- censored.
-
-
- But even if Prodigy doesn't adopt a "conference host" system, it
- ultimately will satisfy its members better if it does allow a true forum
- for free expression. And the service may be moving in that direction
- already: Heilbrunn is quoted in the Wall Street Journal as saying that
- Prodigy has been loosening its content restrictions over the past month.
- Good news, but not good enough--merely easing some content restrictions is
- likely to be no more successful at solving Prodigy's problems than
- Gorbachev's easing market restrictions was at solving the Soviet Union's
- problems. The best solution is to allow what Oliver Wendell Holmes called
- "the marketplace of ideas" to flourish--to get out of the censorship
- business.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- --
- Rita Marie Rouvalis rita@eff.org
- Electronic Frontier Foundation | EFF administrivia to: office@eff.org
- 155 Second Street | Flames to:
- Cambridge, MA 02141 617-864-0665 | women-not-to-be-messed-with@eff.org
-
-
- Attached file 'c:\rfsj\prodigy2.wpf' follows next line...
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- Prodigy: Where Is It Going?
-
- National Rollout And User Protest Raise Questions
- About The Future OfOnline Communications
-
- By Adam Gaffin
-
- The story is bizarre but true, Herb Rothman swears. Prodigy, the
- IBM-Sears joint venture, wouldn't let somebody post a message in a
- coin-collecting forum that he was looking for a particular Roosevelt
- dime for his collection. Curious, the man called ``member services.''
- The representative told him the message violated a Prodigy rule against
- mentioning another user in a public message. ``What user?'' the man
- asked. ``Roosevelt Dime,'' the rep replied. ``That's not a person!''
- the man said. ``Yes he is, he's a halfback for the Chicago Bears!'' the
- rep shot back.
-
- Rothman, a New Yorker who was one of the first to sign up for
- Prodigy when it was introduced in 1988, was one of the first to get
- kicked off this past fall as an organizer of a protest against new email
- charges that began January 1. Prodigy households now have to pay 25
- cents for every message they send over a monthly free quota of 30.
-
- Leaders of the Cooperative Defense Committee--the first
- nationwide protest organized largely online--have focused on issues of
- censorship and alleged bait-and-switch advertising: even after Prodigy
- announced the new charges, it continued to advertise as a flat-rate
- service. The Texas state Attorney General's office began an
- investigation in November to determine whether the ads were deceptive.
- (At presstime Prodigy, while admitting no wrongdoing, had agreed to
- refund charges to Texas subscribers who signed up between September 6
- and December 7 of last year, reimburse the state of Texas for
- investigative costs, and allow Texas users who had signed up during the
- period in question to cancel their accounts for full refunds.)
-
- Prodigy: A Different Vision
-
- But the protest has also focused attention on Prodigy's vision of online
- communications, which is far different from that seen by other national
- online services, let alone local bulletin-board systems.
-
- It's a vision of online communications as computer home-
- shopping network.
-
- Where others see a new way for people to communicate and even
- create "virtual communities,'' Prodigy sees vast potential profits from
- people shopping through their keyboards.
-
- ``We are an information service,'' Prodigy spokesman Steve Hein
- says. "`We are not an email service.''
-
- Although other national services have "malls'' and advertising,
- only Prodigy puts ads on almost every screen a user sees. Advertisers
- pay Prodigy between $10,000 and $20,000 to design these ads and their
- user interfaces.
-
- In press handouts, Prodigy does not even mention its public
- "bulletin boards'' as a feature, pointing instead to things such as
- "news and stock quotes, home shopping and banking, airline ticketing,
- stock trading and our new encyclopedia, movie guide and travel guide.''
-
- Prodigy says its pricing--$12.95 a month for unlimited non-email
- use--is based on the premise that people will use it for shopping.
- ``Every time you use the service to buy a holiday gift, book an airline
- ticket, pay a bill, trade a stock, send flowers or buy stamps, you are
- helping to assure the continuation of a flat, unmetered fee,'' because
- advertisers pay a fee for each purchase and inquiry, Prodigy said in a
- recent message to users.
-
- ``Shopping has been growing more than the bulletin boards,''
- Hein says. He was unable, however, to provide specific figures showing
- how much use each function now gets.
-
- Hein says Prodigy decided to start charging for email because 20
- percent of the users were sending 90 percent of the email messages,
- costing the company millions of dollars for extra computer equipment and
- workers to manage a mail flow growing 20 percent a month. When Prodigy
- started, he said, officials figured households would use email like
- long-distance phone calls: they would only send several messages a
- month.
-
- The Email Explosion
-
- But much of Prodigy's unexpected email traffic is due to the way it runs
- its public conferences. Unlike other services, which rely on the
- maturity of users and only rarely delete public messages, Prodigy
- employs several dozen "editors'' to screen every potential public
- message--sometimes delaying their posting by up to 40 hours, when they
- are posted at all.
-
- According to the Prodigy user agreement: ``Prodigy reserves the
- right to review and edit any material submitted for display or placed on
- the Prodigy service, excluding private electronic messages, and may
- refuse to display or may remove from the service, any material that it,
- in its sole discretion, believes violates this Agreement, is detrimental
- to other Members or to the business interests of Prodigy, its Members or
- information providers or is otherwise objectionable.''
-
- The agreement also forbids members from attempting to buy or
- sell any products without Prodigy's prior written consent. Then it adds,
- ``Prodigy reserves the right, without liability, to remove and not to
- display, any material at the sole discretion of Prodigy. All material
- submitted to a public postings area will be automatically deleted
- according to criteria established by Prodigy.''
-
- Prodigy has software that scans incoming public messages for
- certain objectionable words before it gets to the ``editors,'' but some
- members complain this is not always perfect: for example, people with an
- interest in botany claim they cannot hold a public discussion about
- pussywillows.
-
- Just a few months after Prodigy went online, some users had
- turned to email for uncensored discussions.
-
- In December 1989, Prodigy simply eliminated an entire
- mental-health bulletin board when gays and fundamentalists got into a
- heated debate. Prodigy spokesman Brian Ek compares the network to the
- publisher of a family newspaper that has a right to decide what is
- appropriate. Prodigy has no restricted areas, and has to be concerned
- about what children might see when they log on, he says.
-
- So pet owners were not allowed to use the word "bitch'' in
- discussions about dogs. Coin and stamp collectors could not post lists
- of items they had for swapping, because Prodigy saw that as commercial
- activity.
-
- Yet users complained that even this was done capriciously.
- Rothman says that if one of his messages was rejected, he would
- re-submit it a few times--and often it would eventually get in.
-
- In October, one member asked in the ``About Prodigy'' bulletin
- board why she was not allowed to comment about the use of the phrase
- ``Queen Bitch'' by a character on L.A. Law. A Prodigy official
- responded that Prodigy has different standards for propriety than
- television. But he said the subscriber could use asterisks. If she were
- to write ``Queen B****,'' then ``adults will get the idea but the actual
- words will not appear.''
-
- Rothman says that in late 1988, he had had enough of having his
- messages about glass-object collecting rejected, so he asked Kim
- Hazlerig, a Prodigy member-services employee, if there were any
- alternatives. He says she suggested he set up a ``mailing list'' via
- email and that he contact a Los Angeles subscriber who had written
- software to send large numbers of email messages at once.
-
- Rothman began sending out a weekly newsletter on collectibles.
- By the time he was kicked off the system, he had 1,500 readers.
-
- Solon Owens, a former Berkeley resident now living in Oregon,
- was an active participant in Prodigy's mental-health forum, where he and
- others discussed their progress in 12-step programs such as Alcoholics
- Anonymous. After the conference was eliminated, he started his own
- mailing list of 10 people--which eventually grew to 120.
-
- The number of these email lists exploded. Soon dozens of groups
- were using email mailing lists, typically sent on a weekly basis.
-
- Hein says he is unaware of anybody at Prodigy actually promoting
- email lists or telling people how to start them. For a while, however,
- the coordinators of these lists were allowed to advertise them in a
- public forum on the service twice a month.
-
- But with the new email charges, all this ended. Besides Owens'
- group, a number of handicapped people had set up their own mailing
- lists. Owens says he could not afford to send out messages to the 120
- people now on his mailing list, so he has moved over to GEnie. ``We
- cannot afford to provide free services for the handicapped anymore than
- the Post Office can,'' Hein says, adding the handicapped would likely
- see many of Prodigy's shopping services as a benefit worth keeping.
-
- Told some users feel Prodigy brought much of the email costs on
- itself through censorship, Hein says there was a very small group of
- users who sent out as many as 10,000 email messages a month. ``If people
- hadn't been sending tens of thousands of messages a month, this wouldn't
- be a problem.''
-
- The dissenters claim 20,000 supporting users. But Prodigy claims
- that is still just a small percentage of its subscribers. Hein says the
- network now has more than 400,000 households online. He acknowledges
- that the figure includes people using free signup kits, but said those
- people make up only a small percentage. Prodigy, like other online
- services, has never had its subscriber numbers audited.
-
- Not all users objected to the email charges or the way Prodigy
- runs its public forums. ``If they dislike Prodigy so much, why do they
- have it?'' Jan Salamone of Hull, MA asked of the protesters. Salamone
- likes Prodigy so much she not only wrote them a congratulatory letter
- but let the service reprint it in its member newsletter.
-
- Henry Niman, a University of Pittsburgh researcher who was
- kicked offline, said he does like Prodigy--he even persuaded several
- friends and colleagues to sign up. He said his motive in protesting the
- email rates was to try to keep Prodigy a good system.
-
- Without naming anyone, Prodigy officials have charged that Niman
- and the others are really a small band of ``hackers'' who used devious
- software to flood the mailboxes of other users and advertisers with
- increasingly nasty harangues. In November, it posted new regulations
- forbidding the use of "automatic" mail forwarders and barring users from
- contacting advertisers online except to make orders or inquire about
- orders.
-
- Niman says he compiled a list of about 900 people interested in
- the email issue by using Prodigy's own membership-list function, which
- lets one search for members by city and state, and that he and others
- simply collected the addresses of advertisers from their email
- responses.
-
- Penny Hay, a Los Angeles artist whose account was terminated,
- says the committee was careful to delete the names of anybody who
- objected to the messages.
-
- Impact
-
- Whether the email protest--which has garnered considerable bad press for
- Prodigy--has hurt is an open question.
-
- Prodigy's Brian Ek says the service continues to add thousands
- of new members monthly. Gary Arlen, who writes a newsletter about online
- services, calls the protest a "tempest in a teapot" and says the real
- question is whether Prodigy can ever recoup the several hundred million
- dollars Sears and IBM reportedly poured into it.
-
- But GEnie, a competing system that introduced a flat rate on
- nights and weekends for several dozen services--including email--just as
- Prodigy was announcing its price hike, says it has picked up several
- thousand disgruntled Prodigy users and now has a "Prodigy Refugees"
- forum.-
-
- Advertisers on Prodigy are also mixed.
-
- "RWe've had a very good response in spite of the boycott,"
- Jeanine Sek, in charge of the Prodigy account for Hammacher Schlemmer in
- Chicago, says, adding she quickly grew annoyed with protest messages
- coming into the company's electronic mailbox. Sek says she would come
- in some Monday mornings and find 40 protest messages in the company's
- mailbox, all of which took time to deal with.
-
- Sek says she agrees with Prodigy that a handful of ``hackers''
- were abusing email. ``They know what they're doing, or, at least, I hope
- they know what they're doing,'' she says of Prodigy. She adds that she
- has been pleased with the response the company has received in its first
- year on Prodigy. "We're very happy with it,'' she said.
-
- Chuck Billows, comptroller for H.G. Daniels, an art and drafting
- supply store in Los Angeles, agrees that answering protest messages
- ``has been a tremendous drain on resources'' for his company.
-
- But, he adds, the protest "has cost Prodigy a lot of members and
- customers, and possibly us a lot of sales. ... I think Christmas
- shopping on Prodigy is under what we had expected.''
-
- Billow says he does not see anything wrong with charging heavy
- email users more, but said Prodigy botched the announcement and should
- have offered a second, higher flat rate for such people, rather than
- refusing all attempts at compromise.
-
- ``I think, at best, it wasn't properly presented to their
- members,'' he says, adding that both sides quickly hardened into
- absolute positions. The protesters demanded ``Unlimited email or else,''
- he says, while Prodigy responded with ``Well, the hell with you; this is
- our business and we can do what we want.''
-
- ``I think there's been a lot of time and money wasted'' by both
- sides, he adds.
-
- -----
-
- Copyright 1991 by Adam Gaffin. All rights reserved.
-
- Adam Gaffin is a reporter for the Middlesex News in Framingham, Mass.,
- where he writes about personal computing.
-
-
-
- Attached file 'c:\rfsj\prodigy3.wpf' follows next line...
- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
-
- ---end article(s) from rita@eff.org--
-
- [] Regards, _ _______ _
- Aayush Asthana|Tech. Transfer & |Industrial Technology [_][_ _][_]
- -- aa@iti.org |Commercialization| Institute, [~~~] [ ] [~~~]
- *Disclaimer: Standard* | Ann Arbor, MI 48103 [___] [___] [___]
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