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- Path: sparky!uunet!ibmarc!drake.almaden.ibm.com!drake
- From: drake@drake.almaden.ibm.com (Sam Drake)
- Newsgroups: comp.misc
- Subject: Re: PRODIGY - Speed, Cost, Usefulness, etc.
- Keywords: prodigy macintosh
- Message-ID: <1947@coyote.UUCP>
- Date: 27 Aug 92 08:00:47 GMT
- References: <bond.714758068@khaki19> <2481@cthulhuControl.COM>
- Sender: news@ibmarc.UUCP
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: IBM Almaden Research Center
- Lines: 44
- Nntp-Posting-Host: drake.almaden.ibm.com
-
- In article <2481@cthulhuControl.COM> raisch@Control.COM (Robert Raisch) writes:
- >bond@rtsg.mot.com (Allan Bond) writes:
- >
- >>** Is there any way to customize the service from my end to reduce the
- >> amount of useless advertisements & graphics being dumped to my screen?
- > PRODIGY sells a PRODUCT to a CUSTOMER
- > The PRODUCT is *you*, the user.
- > The CUSTOMER is the advertiser who wants to innundate you with
- > it's own product, USELESS MARKET-BLATHER.
- >[etc]
-
- Seems to me that Robert Raisch's analysis of Prodigy's goals, while
- agressively worded, is somewhat accurate. Prodigy sells advertising;
- advertisers pay rates based on how many people view it. If you could
- ask Prodigy not to send you the ads, advertisers would pay Prodigy less.
- Therefore Prodigy doesn't offer a "turn off the ads, please" switch
- for you to throw.
-
- BUT, two other points should be made:
-
- 1. Robert's analysis is as true for Prodigy as it is for ANY advertising-based
- activity. I wonder is he is as morally outraged by advertising in other
- forms? Does Robert recommend the abolition of TV, radio, newspapers,
- and magazines, too? (That darned Scientific American, they won't sell you
- a copy without the ads. How arrogant of them. Start a boycott. ???)
-
- 2. The revenue that Prodigy takes in from advertisers helps pay for the
- service. Specifically, it's what allows Prodigy to be flat-rate,
- with no connect time charges. Consider ... on most online services
- if you connect for a long time, you cost them more money ... so they
- charge you more money. On Prodigy, the longer you connect, the more
- ads they show you, and the more revenue you bring to Prodigy. This
- extra revenue offsets the cost of you signing on, so they can afford
- to let you on with no connect charges.
-
- Some folks would rather pay connect charges than see ads. That's OK.
- But for others, it's a reasonable tradeoff. Me, I can ignore ads,
- but just wouldn't pay connect charges to use a service. So for me,
- Prodigy's rate structure ... enabled by its ad revenue ... makes it
- a good choice.
-
-
- Sam Drake / IBM Almaden Research Center
- Internet: drake@almaden.ibm.com BITNET: DRAKE at ALMADEN
-