So after writing that last post on AOL's proposed email tax, I reread the article and noticed AOL's dripping derision for the various groups concerned about what this might mean:
AOL spokesman Nicholas Graham: "There is no substantive news here, just because some disparate groups of advocates have come together for an event reminiscent of the bar scene in the first 'Star Wars' movie."And it's not just a money thing.Gilles Frydman of the Association of Cancer Online Resources said bulk e-mail charges will cause problems for organizations like his.
"We cannot pay for the service, we don't have the money," Frydman said.
"In essence, this is going to block every AOL subscriber suffering from any form of cancer from receiving potentially life-saving information they may not be able to get from any other source, simply because a non-profit like ACOR – which serves more than 55,000 cancer patients and caregivers every day – cannot afford to pay the fee. There must be a better solution," says Gilles Frydman, ACOR's President.
So AOL spokesman Nicholas Graham (phone number: 703-265-1746) trash talks cancer patients in pursuit of a scheme to ruin the level playing field of the internet. Its like a parody of evil, except it's real.
Sign up to stop this nonsense and wake up the saner heads at AOL by signing this open letter which launches Tuesday at 1pm.
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