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Technology Stocks : AltaVista Company (ALTA)

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To: fut_trade who wrote (57)6/20/2000 10:58:00 AM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) of 110
 
ALTA introduces an instant messaging product:

news.cnet.com

AltaVista enters instant messaging fray
By Jim Hu
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
June 19, 2000, 5:50 p.m. PT

Web portal AltaVista today launched an instant messaging product that will allow its customers to communicate with
Microsoft's MSN Messenger service.

Dubbed AltaVista Messenger, the product is powered by Tribal Voice's PowWow instant messaging technology. AltaVista Messenger
will allow its members to communicate with Microsoft's service--a way of showing the company's intent to open its network to other
technologies.

"Our free service provides the benefit of rich features and multiple communication modes without imposing
limitations on the users with whom they may communicate," Rod Schrock, AltaVista's chief executive,
said in a statement.

An AltaVista representative added that the company will pursue ways to communicate with America
Online's AOL Instant Messenger (AIM). The representative said the services currently are not
interoperable, however.

The announcement emphasizes the distinct line between AOL and its rivals. With the deal, AltaVista and
Microsoft become the first high-profile companies to allow their instant messaging services to
communicate with each other. Both Microsoft and CMGI, which owns AltaVista and Tribal Voice, have
engaged in scuffles with AOL when they attempted to make their services interoperable with AIM.

AOL has waged battles with many rival instant messenger services that have tried tapping into AIM. It has
fought Microsoft, Prodigy, CMGI's iCast and Tribal Voice, and start-up Odigo after those services began
allowing their members to communicate with AIM users without consent.

AIM has 91 million screen names in its Buddy List network, giving it an enormous lead over its
competitors. Rivals such as Microsoft and CMGI have demanded that AOL open AIM to outside
technologies. They say instant messaging will become a form of communication as ubiquitous as the
telephone, and therefore such networks should be open to all, regardless of technology.

Their criticisms have attracted the attention of federal regulators. Led by CMGI, a coalition of technology heavyweights have lobbied
regulators, asking them to examine AOL's instant messaging lead as part of their review of the online giant's
pending merger with Time Warner.

In the past, rivals have also complained that AOL has not kept up with its promises to pursue an instant
messaging standard.

However, AOL recently submitted a proposal to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) for a universal instant
messaging standard. The IETF, the industry's standards body, will review AOL's proposal along with several other submissions and
eventually choose one.
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