Everyone's pointing fingers these days -- and AOL issued a
press release to help. It seems AOL took the release of Kenneth
Starr's report to Congress as an opportunity to tout their "caching" of
web pages. What AOL's users may not realize is this means they're no
longer
forming a live connection to the internet. AOL is serving them an old
copy of the document -- which is fine if it never changes. But if the
original
web site adds new information -- you won't see it... Even then, AOL's
copy of the Kenneth Starr report was preceded with
an unintentionally funny warning to parents. "The Starr report contains
adult language and situations and may be objectionable to some people," it
read. "While the content of this report falls within the bounds of our
Community Guidelines, it is not appropriate for children." (Meanwhile,
AOL's grip has extended to more software companies!)