Fighting back

Published: 6 December 1999 y., Monday
One of America Online_s leading chatroom leaders is fighting back after he and others were booted offline by the giant Internet company. Bronx native Robert DeLena created a cyber-forum four years ago called the Other Side of Creativity -- a place where thousands of published and aspiring writers meet to discuss industry secrets and advice. But he was recently told by AOL brass to take a walk. DeLena, a psychology professor at Bronx Community College, incorporated the Other Side of Creativity about 18 months ago and says the forum attracts over 5,000 writers a day -- including bestselling authors Steven Gaines and Kelsey Roberts. He says he owns the right to control the forum and refuses to relinquish the site to AOL -- which has since given DeLena the pink slip. "Thank you for your participation in America Online_s Community Leader Program," AOL_s Community Manager Mike Sansone wrote DeLena. "Unfortunately, your volunteer contributions are no longer needed. In addition, you are no longer eligible to participate in AOL_s Community Leader Program," he continued. AOL says DeLena is not alone. The company says it is in the process of transferring all 75 Workplace Channel communities like DeLena_s to the web to relieve the pressure on their servers. But DeLena insists the cyber-giant wants to get rid of popular community leaders so they can turn the areas into corporate-sponsored, money-making channels.
Šaltinis: New York Post
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Microsoft Corp. on Monday capitulated to customer pressure

Microsoft Bows to Pressure, Extends Support for Older Windows Versions more »

Gates Unveils Innovative New Products and Services at CES

In his keynote address at the 2004 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), Microsoft Corp. Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates expanded on the company's vision for "seamless computing" more »

2004 to be year of the 'superworm'

Virus writers create secret P2P virus network more »

Intel launches Celeron M chip line

Lower-cache processors are designed for thin and light notebooks more »

Japan, China, S. Korea developing next Net

Japan, China and South Korea are reportedly planning to jointly develop Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6), the next-generation Internet standard more »

Online crime up in 2003

It seems 2003 was a productive year for phishers, online auction scammers and Nigerians professing a deep sense of purpose and utmost sincerity more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

'Phisher' site targets Visa, as holiday scams abound

Ruse uses e-mail, Web site to snag account numbers and personal identification numbers more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »