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To: david who wrote (30437)9/7/1999 3:18:00 PM
From: Luis  Respond to of 41369
 
DAVID same as me aol down over 3 points, friday up 5 + ,THE OTRE NTES UP OVER 10 POINTS AND TODAY down less tan a point., the aol doggy show
luis



To: david who wrote (30437)9/7/1999 7:39:00 PM
From: tang  Respond to of 41369
 
Russian is coming? or

Tuesday September 7 3:49 PM ET

WorldSpy Offers Free Internet Access, Without
Ads

By Nicole Volpe

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Online shopping site WorldSpy Tuesday said it is offering access to
the Internet not only free of charge, but also free of advertising, in a move designed to lure U.S.
customers to its site.

The Ardsley, N.Y.-company said the free service -- now in a preliminary test run that will
become generally available to consumers on Oct. 1 -- is the latest twist on efforts by U.S.
retailers to offer ``free' online access to consumers, joining a rush by computer makers and
others to do so.

``We're not asking people for personal information, we're not going to target anything to them,'
Chief Executive Alan Clingman said in a phone interview ahead of the announcement. 'This is a
customer acquisition vehicle. We expect to have a million subscribers within 12 months,' he
said.

If successful, WorldSpy's subscriber base would put it among the top ten suppliers of Web
access to U.S. consumers.

Clingman said his company plans to profit from commissions on transactions made at its online
retail site, as opposed to making money from subscriptions, as top access providers, such as
America Online Inc. (NYSE:AOL - news), do. It would also forgo display advertising, as
upstart access provider NetZero of Westlake, Calif. does.

``You wouldn't charge people to come to the mall to shop, so why should we charge people to
come to buy at our site?' asked Clingman.

Privately held WorldSpy said it will also offer free e-mail as a way to draw traffic to the site,
where consumers can comparison shop and buy products online from a variety of manufacturers.
To maintain an independent image as a place to research products, Clingman said he does not
post advertising on the site.

WorldSpy said it would offer its free Internet access service under a contract with
Microportal.com, a supplier of private label Internet access services. Terms of that agreement
were not available.

``We've structured the site to be non-biased. On the Internet, advertising is not a long-term
proposition, anyway,' Clingman said. ``The click through rates are pointed south.'

WorldSpy joins a list of better-known names that have introduced or are said to be considering
free Web access offers.

Last month, Web search and media network AltaVista, a unit of CMGI Inc. (Nasdaq:CMGI -
news), introduced free Internet access to U.S. subscribers willing to view ads. Analysts believe
Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq:MSFT - news) also is mulling a more aggressive stance on access, in
the form of low-price, or even free Web access.

WorldSpy's financial backers include online brokerage Wit Capital and investment banker Sands
Brothers. The company just finished an $18 million round of financing. Clingman said he is not
currently considering an initial public offering.



To: david who wrote (30437)9/7/1999 8:19:00 PM
From: 10K a day  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
Options Infection Baby!
~32K contracts holding it under 100...
Is Andressen done selling?