Reprinted from TidBITS#841/07-Aug-06 with permission.
Copyright (C) 2006, TidBITS. All rights reserved.
http://www.tidbits.com/

AOL Drops Fees, Offers 5 GB Free Storage
----------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>

  America Online[28] dropped a fee bomb last week: You can use their
  antiquated, funky, irritating software with an AOL account at no cost,
  as long as you don't want to use dial-up Internet access. Dial-up
  accounts cost just $10 per month for unlimited usage and unlimited
  customer support. (Some press reports stated that dial-up service would
  remain nearly $26 per month for unlimited use and that the free accounts
  wouldn't be available until September. Rather, $26 per month accounts
  will drop in price to $10 per month for existing subscribers over what
  appears to be a one-month transition. Current broadband-only users pay
  about $15 per month, and that fee will disappear.)

[28]<http://www.aol.com/>

  AOL has 18 million subscribers, but lost one million in the second
  quarter. All dial-up service providers, including EarthLink, AOL, and
  even a corporate reseller called iPass, are seeing significant
  quarter-over-quarter declines as U.S. users switch to broadband Internet
  service.

  Having dealt with AOL in the past, I wanted to see this with my own
  eyes. I went to AOL's Web site, clicked Sign Up Now in the upper right
  corner, and was offered free (bring your own bandwidth) or $10 per month
  for unlimited dial-up connectivity. My in-laws have been paying the $10
  per month rate for unlimited use for some time, and I previously thought
  it was a billing error. Now I think AOL has quietly been ratcheting the
  cost down to customers who complain (as my in-laws did) during the
  transition period. They're now broadband users and will keep AOL, since
  they don't want to get new email addresses at the moment.

  AOL says that they will make money through - volume! Underpants gnomes!
  Spaghetti feeds! Advertising! Guess which one of those four is true. The
  company also expects to save oodles of money by dropping thousands of
  employees who deal with issues of billing, payment, and associated
  matters, and the elimination of four million billion tons of AOL CD-ROM
  inserts and mailings. The company also believes that selling ads to what
  they expect will be a new, larger audience will produce better returns.
  (About 1,300 customer service job cuts were announced in May, and 5,000
  on 03-Aug-06[29]. AOL currently employs about 19,000 employees
  worldwide.)

[29]<http://www.forbes.com/home/feeds/ap/2006/08/03/ap2926093.html>

  What can AOL offer you? If you like their form of newsgroups and chat,
  walled-garden news sites, and horrible, horrible email, then it's for
  you. I have a hard time seeing how AOL offers anything unique within its
  package. Its Web-based interface for email is not bad at all, by
  contrast, and a number of Web-only services are just fine. And AOL
  Instant Messenger forms the basis for Apple's iChat services.

  Oh, and AOL wants to give you 5 GB of free online storage, too[30]. AOL
  acquired online storage firm Xdrive almost precisely a year ago[31]. The
  company currently charges $10 per month for single-user access to 5 GB.
  (Larger amounts of storage and workgroups cost extra, and they work hard
  to hide the pricing link[32].)

[30]<http://xdrive.com/>
[31]<http://xdrive.com/aboutus/pr_08_04_2005.jsp>
[32]<http://xdrive.com/support/online_help/intro/fees.htm>

  Xdrive will start offering 5 GB of online storage for personal use to
  all comers in early September. These accounts offer ways to create
  public folders to let others retrieve files. Offering this amount of
  storage for free raises the bar on Internet-based storage in the same
  way that Google's Gmail[33] - now in its second year as a public beta! -
  did for free and cheap email storage, transfers, and attachments.

  What all this means for AOL is hard to say. AOL's software still stinks.
  AOL's email filtering is highly erratic. Any of us who run mailing lists
  are familiar with suddenly having all of our double opt-in, fully
  approved AOL users bounce our email for some obscure reason that's
  impossible to address directly with AOL.

  And, well, AOL has betrayed users' general trust over and over again,
  primarily in terms of its unpleasant, legally proven behavior in making
  it almost impossible to stop being charged for their service. This will
  all change when AOL becomes uninterested in collecting user revenue, and
  the marketing machine is replaced by an advertising machine.

  On the other hand, the apparently purposeful but
  unauthorized-from-the-top release 10 days ago of some 20 million search
  queries entered by over 650,000 AOL Search users[34] during a recent
  three-month period shows that AOL may still not have the right internal
  controls and sensibility that benefits our interest. The data were
  intended for academic research, but the keyword searches were organized
  by user, and were not "anonymized" by having identifiable queries and
  private data removed. AOL pulled the data today and apologized, but it's
  far too late to put that downloaded-genie back in the bottle.

[33]<http://news.com.com/AOL+apologizes+for+release+of+user+search+data/2100-1030_3-6102793.html>

  Do we need and trust AOL in a world of a billion other Web sites, many
  of them offering better features and run with better oversight? They'll
  have to show us why.