On Sun, 9 Mar 1997, Todd Day wrote:
> I really hate all these Johnny-come-lately access providers that seem to
> go out of their way to make things difficult for those of us who provide
> things for free, and are not willing to fix their mistakes when we point
> them out.
It is neither Juno's fault nor your fault.
Juno is providing a free service to all those who use it. Nobody's forcing
them to use it and the terms are very simple. You get what you pay for.
You also provide a free service. Anybody who wants to receive it can,
anybody who cannot receive it is losing out.
THe problem is with those who demand everything that you and I get -- from
a free service.
The same, BTW, holds true for any provider. There are no secrets anymore
in this game. If AOL limits you -- either keep your load down or go to
someone else who puts their priority on allowing their user's more e-mail
storage.
The option is all up to the consumer -- both you and Juno provide whatever
you want. If somebody wishes to receive it, that's their problem to figure
out how.
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| Brock Rozen | brozen@webdreams.com | http://www.webdreams.com/~brozen |
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