North America | South America | Latin America | Confederate States of America | America | Boy Scouts of America | Good Morning America | Bank of America | Central America | United Way of America | Captain America | Voice of America | Miss America | All-America | America's Got Talent | America's Next Top Model | The Catholic University of America | America One | Socialist Party of America | Evangelical Lutheran Church in America | Copa América | America's Most Wanted | América de Cali | Writers Guild of America | Independent station (North America) | Motion Picture Association of America | God Bless America | Directors Guild of America | America's Cup | Justice Society of America |
In September 1995 they hired a fan, Troy Rutter, to take over the site and move it not only to its own domain name at www.babylon5.com, but also to oversee the "Keyword B5" area on America Online.
Use grew rapidly during the first years, but there was significant competition from America Online when that service launched a year later on the Macintosh platform.
It was based on a slightly stripped down version of Island of Kesmai with 2D sprites replacing IoK
In 1997, Governor Geringer called for a boycott of America Online after Sondra London posted a series of murder confessions sent to her from "Happy Face Killer" Keith Jesperson, protesting that he found the items to be offensive.
In August 2008 DailyCandy.com was sold to Comcast for a reported US$125 million by its then owner media-mogul Robert Pittman an American entrepreneur and the founder of MTV and ex-COO of America Online, Inc and AOL Time Warner.
NeoEdge was originally founded in 2002 by Steven Woods, Jeromy Carriere, Kelly Slough, Dave Simons, and Michael Babiak, former Netscape and America Online employees, under the name "Kinitos".
Clips of Ogden Edsl songs, namely "Dead Puppies", frequently circulated amongst AOL users as chatroom-playable .wav files in the mid and late 1990s.
He also created and hosted Investors On-Line, a nationally syndicated TV show; hosted Canada's Business Report, a daily radio show; and wrote an investment column for America Online.
PlayMaker Football spawned a small but dedicated community of players on online providers such as America Online and CompuServe.
The Shadow of Yserbius, along with its successors, remained online until 1996, when America Online purchased the rights from then-owner AT&T for an undisclosed price (rumored to be $40 million).
On April 25, 1995, six days after the Oklahoma City bombing, a message was anonymously posted on America Online’s (AOL) "Michigan Military Movement" bulletin board advertising items with slogans glorifying the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.
Erol's Internet offered unlimited access to the then very basic internet for a flat monthly fee, as opposed to the "by the hour" model employed by larger Internet Service Providers such as America Online (AOL) and CompuServe.
Jim Kimsey, co-founder, CEO, and first chairman of America Online