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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John F. Dowd who wrote (38521)2/25/2000 11:40:00 AM
From: John F. Dowd  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 74651
 
To All: Please read this article. This is real harm to the consumer. After MSFT is exonerated by the Appeals Court Aol will get its turn in the barrel.

February 24, 2000 22:04

AOL 5.0 Causes System Disaster, Hagens Berman LLP Claims; Class-action claims Internet provider forces customers to use AOL


SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 24, 2000--Many Washington state residents who installed the latest version of America Online (NYSE:AOL) to surf the Internet are finding themselves drowning in software problems, according to a class action lawsuit filed today in Washington state.
America Online, the suit claims, knowingly released a version of their software that, without warning, made major changes to users' computer operating systems rendering them unstable, and in some cases, inoperable. The suit also claims that AOL, the world's largest Internet software provider (ISP), effectively barred their customers from connecting with competing ISPs.

The suit, filed today in King County Superior Court, claims the Internet giant failed to divulge to its users that the AOL 5.0 upgrade would make dramatic changes to the users' operating systems and would interfere with the user's ability to connect to the competing ISP networks.

Seattle attorney Steve Berman, known for his national expertise in class-action lawsuits, filed a lawsuit on behalf of Washington state residents under the Consumer Protection Act.

"Users who installed AOL 5.0 expected that they were going to get 500 free hours of faster, better Internet access," Berman said. "But what really happened was that their computers were unknowingly sabotaged so that they could no longer use any Internet service other than AOL. This was a brazen attempt by AOL to hold these customers hostage as long as they wanted to connect to the Internet."

According to Berman, AOL 5.0 is perhaps the most insidious way the company could force consumers to use AOL. "Once the software was up and running, it changes so many of the systems configurations, the average user had no hope of connecting with anyone else other than AOL. Many who tried to unwind the installation found that it was almost impossible since it affected more than 200 files."

JFD



To: John F. Dowd who wrote (38521)3/9/2000 8:26:00 PM
From: taxman  Respond to of 74651
 
Riding the Bullet, a 16,000-word fable King describes as "a ghost story in the grand manner," will be available Tuesday only as an e-book. Fans can download the 66-page thriller for $2.50 and read it on a PC, palm device or dedicated e-book viewer.

dailynews.yahoo.com

regards