Lycos critical of MSN chat room closure

By Munir Kotadia
25 September 2003 09:20 AM
Tags: chat, msn, closure, lycos, room, moderate, safe
Microsoft rival Lycos has criticised the software giant's stance on chat rooms, saying that greater investment could lead to a safer online environment.

Alex Kovach, managing director of Lycos U.K., which runs a fully moderated chat room for around 100,000 users, said on Wednesday that chat is here to stay and it's not going to go away just because Microsoft has decided to shut down its chat services.

"By switching them off, Microsoft looks like it is taking the moral high ground, but in reality this is irresponsible," Kovach said. "Now it's more important that people provide responsible chat. Otherwise it will get driven underground, and the risks will increase." He said Lycos, part of Spanish Internet conglomerate Terra Lycos, employs around 100 chat moderators across the United Kingdom and uses a combination of human intervention and software to create "a safer environment".

Microsoft dismissed the concept of moderated chat rooms, saying they are not 100 percent effective. The company, which has 1 million regular users of its chat technology, said the reasons behind the closure of its services were not financial ones.

"Financial considerations did not come into place here," said Matt Whittingham, head of customer satisfaction at MSN. "We made a decision solely wishing to protect our customers from inappropriate communications."

Whittingham said that the real experts in guarding children are not MSN or America Online, but national organisations that were formed to protect children. "You cannot moderate all the chats--it is not practical," he said.

He also said that MSN had enough of "inappropriate communications" such as pornographic spam and advised its users to "go and use safe online communications like instant messenger, which is vastly more sophisticated and safer than chat services."

Kovach, however, believes that Microsoft could make the chat rooms safer by spending money: "It is expensive to provide moderated chat. Obviously, you need to provide people, but you also need quality software. It is expensive to do that," he said.

Munir Kotadia reported from London.

Advertisement

Talkback 1 comments

    msn is only trying to make cha ...gail leanne theiss -- 06/11/03

    msn is only trying to make chat a subscription service...........they have no other motive

Latest Videos

Blogs

  • Darren Greenwood Telecom NZ savings damage prospects
    If Telecom NZ wants to have any of the NZ$1.5 billion the government intends to spend on its new broadband network, it had better think long and hard before offshoring 1500 jobs.
  • Array iiNet: The whys and what nows
    Last week the Federal Court ruled that internet service providers are not responsible for copyright violation by their customers. This is an important decision not just for iiNet, which spent around $4 million defending the case, but for all ISPs in Australia and, indeed, globally.
  • Array Govt, hurry up with releasing data
    A programmer scraped data from the My School website to make some really cool heat maps showing regions of smart schools — no thanks to the government, which didn't supply the data in any useful kind of format.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured