Microsoft has renewed efforts to gain the upper hand over America Online in a war brewing over so-called instant messaging services.
Microsoft has apparently fired another shot at AOL by releasing yet another fix to AOL's Buddy List blockade. Microsoft's third fix was put in place last night after AOL redoubled its initiative over the weekend to block users of Microsoft's MSN Messenger. However, MSN Messenger users cannot access AOL users when both instant messaging clients are opened.
"We are going to continue to provide interoperability for the foreseeable future," a Microsoft spokesman said today.
The online rivals played out the same scenario Friday.
Several CNET News.com readers reported yesterday that they had been able to connect using a fix released Friday by Microsoft, but that by yesterday morning, AOL had managed to block them out again. Microsoft apparently released another fix yesterday afternoon.
Neither AOL nor Microsoft could be reached for comment.
AOL has stated its intention is to isolate users of its Instant Messenger
and ICQ programs for security reasons, but Microsoft has charged that
excluding users of MSN Messenger and a beta version of Yahoo's
instant messaging software risks splintering the fast-growing market. There's
also suspicion that
front-running AOL is trying to shield its large and valuable user
base--many of whom don't subscribe to AOL's Internet access service--from
commercial rivals just entering the market.
One expert predicted the skirmish is likely to escalate into a technical
war. "There is a potential for this to turn real nasty from a technical
point of view," Vijay Saraswat, cochair of the Internet Engineering Task
Force's (IETF) Instant
Messaging and Presence Protocol, wrote in an email interview.
"If [Microsoft] includes in
their software the ability for it to randomly generate any one of a whole
slew of version strings, AOL would basically not be able to block them
out," he said.
Thursday, when Microsoft belatedly launched its MSN
Messenger, it threw its support behind the IETF's efforts to develop a
standard protocol for instant messaging, intended to make independent
technologies compatible. MSN Messenger is designed to work with rival
instant messaging
software as well as integrate MSN Hotmail, the company's free email
service.
AOL promptly criticized Microsoft's MSN Messenger, charging that it poses
a security risk to AOL users. When new MSN Messenger users want to
import their AOL Buddy Lists, they are required to type in their passwords. AOL
said Microsoft is "goading" users to reveal their passwords and compared the
practice to what hackers do. In response, Microsoft said security is not
an issue because the company cannot access the passwords.
"Just as we have in the past, we continue to block anyone who attempts
to use the AOL infrastructure in an unauthorized way regardless of whether
those infringements involve new products or efforts like spamming,
hacking, or password stealing," AOL spokeswoman Ann Brackbill said
yesterday.
Users of Microsoft and Yahoo's services initially were able to send
instant messages to AOL screen names. But Friday morning, a number of
CNET News.com readers, including members of the IETF charged with seeking a
standard protocol, reported that they were unable to send messages from MSN
Messenger software to users of AOL Instant Messenger, despite having been
able to do so the day before.
The readers said attempts to send messages from Microsoft's software
to AOL Instant Messenger users resulted in an "incorrect password/login"
error. Some said the same was true for Yahoo Messenger, Yahoo's
second-generation instant-messaging client, which is currently in beta.
According to Brian Park, senior producer for Yahoo Messenger, the
protocols used to build interoperability with AOL Instant Messenger stopped
working.
"They were working last night, and they are not working today," he said
on Friday. "I'm assuming that AOL made a change to their protocols."
A Microsoft spokesman called AOL's act "unfortunate" and against
consumer demands for open instant messaging platforms. "They are more
focused on maintaining their own situation than what's right for their
consumers."
AOL's Brackbill disagreed. "This has nothing to do with being unreceptive
to consumers," she said. "In our view, Microsoft's just violated the
cardinal rule of the Internet by asking our users their screen names."
Interestingly, MSN Messenger does not allow communication with Yahoo
Messenger.
Meanwhile, Prodigy, which offers a similar service, has called for a
meeting of Internet companies to create an open standard that would let
anyone send instant messages to anybody else, regardless of what online
service they use, according to Bloomberg.
Prodigy developed its own instant messaging service based on technology
released by AOL, but after two months of use AOL blocked Prodigy members
from sending the instant messages to AOL members, according to Prodigy.
Bill Kirkner, Prodigy's chief technology officer, said AOL asked Prodigy
instead to license AOL's own instant messaging software and pay for the
ability to send the messages to AOL subscribers, Bloomberg reported.
"They were soliciting software developers to go out and use" the instant
messaging technology released by AOL, Bloomberg quoted Kirkner as
saying. "That's what you do to get something to become an open standard.
Then they yanked the protocol back and said we had to pay them."
AOL is opposed to the proposed standard because it wants to protect its
existing market dominance, analysts said. AOL also owns ICQ, another popular instant messaging
service that the company has turned into a "desktop communications
portal." As of June, ICQ had 35 million registrations.
Bloomberg contributed to this report.
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