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AOL outages and service status in Ogden, Utah

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  • AOL generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Ogden, including 0 direct reports.

AOL (America Online) is an internet portal as well as an internet service provider. As an ISP, AOL offers dial up internet through its AOL Advantage plans.

Problems in the last 24 hours in Ogden, Utah

The chart below shows the number of AOL reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Ogden, Utah and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

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Community Discussion

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AOL Issues Reports Near Ogden, Utah

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in Ogden and nearby locations:

  • DenebolaZenFoto
    Joseph Barney (@DenebolaZenFoto) reported from North Ogden, Utah

    Mexican crap off" and I told him and his friends mind their business it's headphones not a boom box. Those kind of people aren't invited to the party so they have no business planning or running it. I got assaulted at AOL, fought back and gringos threatened to call the cops. I

  • amandajinut
    Amanda “Nasty” Johnson (@amandajinut) reported from Ogden, Utah

    Thanks to Biden picking Kamala Harris for VP, I get to drag my Viking name out of the closet. An AOL-era edgelord irritated that he couldn't get a rise or his way from a woman in tech support dubbed me Amanda the Nasty. It's been a thing insecure guys do for decades. #nastywoman

  • DenebolaZenFoto
    Joseph Barney (@DenebolaZenFoto) reported from North Ogden, Utah

    Someone deleted Thalia from my playlist and the ******* that told me turn off Thalia when I worked at AOL is blonde and the **** boss at Unisys is blonde and the pig South Ogden cop who was an *** when I called him at the apartment and refused to help, yes blonde and the *****

  • DenebolaPhoto
    Denebola42 (@DenebolaPhoto) reported from North Ogden, Utah

    Got pulled." Lol I think he followed me to the edge of North Ogden. Wow. You must really hate Mexicans. Reminds me of AOL with a güero told me to "turn that Mexican shit off" just because he had good hearing and could hear the sound bleed through my Sony Discman headphones.

  • DenebolaPhoto
    Denebola42 (@DenebolaPhoto) reported from North Ogden, Utah

    And in college Black dudes gave me crap, and at the bus stop I ran fast and far when a Black guy asked if he could try on my nice leather jacket, and when I worked at AOL a Black guy scammed me and I let him cuz I was afraid he'd kill me, so, I don't think it's a race thing per

  • AnOceanofTime
    Joe B (@AnOceanofTime) reported from North Ogden, Utah

    I think this whole time, even in 97 I was a target for recruitment by foreign powers. I remember someone I met on AOL trying to get me to move to France via fake marriage. Although I'd probably be safer there I think I never stopped being a corporate target either for recruitment

  • DenebolaZenFoto
    Joseph Barney (@DenebolaZenFoto) reported from North Ogden, Utah

    I remember the internal porn sent to me at AOL that a coworker got from a network admin hinting I could get that if I joined their group. I'm pretty sure major tech companies sometimes do human trafficking stuff. It was a gorgeous foreign chick. All tan and stuff. Power does

AOL Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • milanm_
    Milan (@milanm_) reported

    For people with newsletters - do you get more spam reports from AOL/Yahoo users? I have a user which hit mark as spam 3 times in the last month or so, but is still using the product. People tell me that's "normal" for AOL/Yahoo users, that some of them treat mark as spam button as a delete button. How to handle this? Disabling the user?

  • gaumishang
    Michael L. Gaugler (@gaumishang) reported

    @cutoffs_io I am freaking Gaumishang everywhere. Twitter LinkedIn Yahoo AOL you name it I unified my entire online presence decades ago and still refuse to have a Facebook account because first of all that ******* is an ******* and does not have the American people's interests in mind. You can even look up my thesis film at UB, those of you who use it are buffoons. PK12 BA MAH BSEd.🙏🇺🇸

  • NomentionofKev
    Kevin Jones (@NomentionofKev) reported

    @LexiAIexander Not crazy making, it's by design. AI frustrates the customer & impedes any real change to the account because even canceling a subscription becomes a tour de force with its labyrinthian path to a result. My old cable company has this system which replicates AOL in its last days.

  • f_marzotto
    f_marzotto (@f_marzotto) reported

    $BSP is a masterpiece. Just not of innovation. Working in Big Tech, you get used to seeing what actual scale and innovation look like. So watching Italy crown Bending Spoons as its great tech champion - a team that buys beloved, declining brands like AOL, Evernote, WeTransfer, and Meetup to "revive" them - has been fascinating. Their $18 billion IPO is largely deserved: they are exceptional operators. They make neglected software fast and profitable. The machine works. But there are two things you can do to a fading product. You can make it modern and profitable again - or you can make it win again, attracting new people who genuinely love it. Bending Spoons does the first brilliantly. The second, almost never. Their own SEC prospectus reveals the trick. Organic growth was 13% last year, and just 6% last quarter. Net revenue retention is 94%, meaning each cohort of users is worth less a year later, even after aggressive price hikes. This isn't a base being won back; it's a base leaking quietly, taxed harder on the way out. This is exactly why comparing them to Big Tech is so revealing. Picture $META putting WhatsApp or Instagram behind a paywall tomorrow. There would be a global uproar. Meta has the most locked-in audience on Earth, yet they refuse to charge them. Why? Because they are still chasing growth. Bending Spoons charges its captive audiences precisely because it has no growth left to protect. They execute the exact playbook that would make Meta a supervillain, but on smaller apps with weaker exits - and we call it genius. The reviled villain treats its users better than the celebrated innovator. A true maker earns its price by building something genuinely better; you pay because you want to stay. Bending Spoons didn't build these products; braver people did. They buy them when they are loved and hard to quit, and turn them into extraction machines. They are professional converters of makers into takers. Charging people because they want to stay makes everyone richer. Charging them because they can't leave just moves money from users to shareholders. One is a gain for the world. The other is a transfer. And every switch they flip is one more bill on people already drowning in subscriptions, asked to pay again for what they once had free. Of course, the business works. Rent extraction is the safest business on earth: low risk, fast payback, nothing to invent. But compare that to actual innovation. Whatever you think of Elon Musk, he took real risk on things that didn't exist yet: Tesla forced open the EV industry, SpaceX made rockets reusable, and each time the rest of the world had to follow. He earned his success by growing the pie; Bending Spoons pours the same ingenuity into nag screens and cancellation mazes, carving up a pie someone else baked. Let's not call a toll booth a cathedral. Celebrate rent-collection as innovation, and we teach our best makers to optimize the past instead of building the future.

  • doniprophecy
    doniprophecy (@doniprophecy) reported

    @poe_real69 The bull case is that ETH is too big to fail — and too slow to succeed. It's the AOL of crypto. When's the last time you actually used it?

  • SockbatReplica
    SockbatReplica (@SockbatReplica) reported

    The funny thing is if you just cancelled your internet after the trial period AOL would just mail you another trial disk. We never paid for internet when I was a kid.

  • xBig_401
    xBig_401 (@xBig_401) reported

    @luckychappy_ @Diiabeetuss they are, and i generally dont buy from them anymore. if u dont care about ur employees then u dont care about ur consumer. and complain, have u heard AOL dial up? ever try to look something up for school and get kicked off cuz someone needed the phone. damn right i complained

  • Sandraj1968
    Sandra L. Johnson (@Sandraj1968) reported

    My email has changed- I no longer use aol but X says i still do. It wants my old password but I can’t remember it. Please help.

  • marc_cavalera
    Marc Cavalera ⚔️ (@marc_cavalera) reported

    @turtledumplin Life without Internet, then slow *** Internet, message boards, Yahoo & AOL chatrooms.

  • Will_Schryver
    Will Schryver (@Will_Schryver) reported

    2000–2002: Bubble, Terror & Scandal 2000: NASDAQ peaks at 5,048 (March 10) and begins a 78% collapse. AOL announces the $165B Time Warner merger — the worst deal ever 2001: 9/11 closes markets until Sept 17 — the longest shutdown since 1914. Enron collapses in December 2002: WorldCom's $11B fraud → Sarbanes-Oxley. The bear bottoms in October, down 49%