>>This is pure Corporate Big Brother and it is amazing how
>many
>>not only acquiesce but embrace it. Go figure.
>
>TY:
>
>It would be far more trouble to change my AOL email addresses
>than to put up with what are, in reality, very minor problems
>at AOL. Very, very little incoming AOL email is blocked. At
>least that's been my experience over 15 years and, yes, I'd
>know if I was missing email in any great amount: when people
>send you email and you don't get it, they end up contacting
>you in other ways. And my experience is that AOL email is at
>least as reliable, over time, as any other ISP I've ever
>worked with. Being in the IT business, I've worked with quite
>a few and they all have their own reliability issues. You
>just hear about AOL's a lot because they're big and people
>like to complain about them. But you don't hear anyone
>talking about the fact that tens of millions of people around
>the world are getting their email day in and day out, every
>day of the year, through AOL.
>
>We've gone over this before and agreed to disagree. I think
>it's great for people to have choices and be able to choose
>the ISP they want to work with. I happen to like AOL for a
>variety of reasons, of which high reliability is only one.
>It works for me but I don't care if others use other ISPs.
>Why should I?
>
>However, I also don't choose not to respond to people simply
>because I don't like the ISP that they happened to choose for
>their own service.
>
>Guess we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one, once
>again. :-)
>
>By the way, this board seems to be picking up. Nice job.
>Congrats to you and Oz.
>
>BG
BG if an escort doesn't have any other contact info about you other then your email address how else are they going to contact you? It wouldn't be trouble to have a reliable email address for hirring. It takes maybe 5 minutes.
Hugs,
Greg