AOL to offer insurance to subscribers
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Over the past two years, AOL has been giving away more and more of its services to boost traffic to its ad-supported Web sites and prevent defection to comparable, no-cost offerings from rivals.
At the same time, the Dulles, Va.-based online unit of Time Warner Inc. has faced competition from low-cost service providers like United Online Inc. for the services for which AOL can keep charging — dial-up access.
The premium security offerings are an attempt to provide more value for the full-price plans.
Besides insurance, subscribers of eligible plans get software for optimizing computers and for monitoring attempts by programs to send out credit card, bank account and Social Security numbers. Also included is a tool for wiping a storage disk clean so that deleted files can't be recovered should a user donate or resell a computer.
Subscribers of the $26 plan also get 50 gigabytes of free online storage, 10 times the amount AOL gives away free to others.
AOL will also sell separately a Total Care product that includes automated backup services beyond what's offered with the free online storage. The product is still undergoing a "beta" test, and prices have not been announced.
Total Care is comparable to the Windows Live OneCare service that Microsoft Corp. began offering in May for $50 a year to cover up to three computers. Both offer security software, backup services and computer utilities.
AOL, meanwhile, began giving away parental-control services on Monday, in line with its pledge last month when the company announced its strategy to make even more services free in light of continued declines in subscriptions — to 17.7 million in the United States as of June 30, a 34 percent drop from its peak in September 2002.
The services block access to Web sites AOL or parents deem inappropriate for minors, limit when and how long kids stay online through a software timer and produce reports detailing their children's Internet activities.
Microsoft, which offers parental controls to paying customers of MSN, also is testing a free tool, Windows Live OneCare Family Safety.
Both AOL and Microsoft already make other security programs such as personal firewalls available free.
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