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Meeting your new best friends Six Degrees widens your contacts in exchange for sampling Web sites By Doug Bedell / Staff Writer of The Dallas Morning News Published 10-27-1998
Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi once calculated that technology
would someday enable contact with any human on the planet through
5.83 people. Free Internet sites such as Six Degrees (www.sixdegrees.com) are
using cyberspace to make the predictions of the 19th-century telegraphy
pioneer a 20th-century reality. With an architecture that builds ever-widening rings of business
and social associations, Six Degrees allows users to exchange information
with a growing database of more than 1 million people worldwide. "If you think about the things most successful on the Internet,
they are those that replicate something that already works," says
Andrew Weinreich, Six Degrees president and chief executive. "We know
networking works between people. "We're just making it more efficient." No-charge bulletin boards, e-mail service and online messaging
are offered to those who fill out a brief information form and list
e-mail addresses for 10 friends, relatives or business associates.
They comprise your first degree. The entire Six Degrees network of
people is the sixth degree. In between are the circles of associations
formed by the friends of friends and the contacts each invites on
board. "Say you're coming out of college and you want to be a lawyer
in Dallas," says Mr. Weinreich, a 30-year-old lawyer and former investment
banker who dropped everything last year to start MacroView Communications
Corp., parent of Six Degrees. "You say, 'Who knows an environmental
lawyer in Dallas?' You want advice. We give you a shot at that." The interaction, he stresses, doesn't have to be work-related.
"You can get a movie review from Siskel and Ebert, but wouldn'
t you rather hear it from friends you trust?" he asked. Six Degrees' popularity can be measured by participation. What
started last year with 150 people in New York City has blossomed into
a service that adds 4,000 members every 24 hours. Users swear by its ability to find others across the globe with
similar interests. From Fredrik Haren, a Swedish techie: "While in
Tokyo, I thought it would be nice to meet some fellow interactive
media people. The problem was that I did not know anybody in Japan.
So I posted a question asking my first- and second-degree friends.
... Today, I got an e-mail from a friend of someone in my second-degree
who turns out to be a Swede working in Japan with interactive media.
"Right now, he is helping me book meetings with other companies
in Japan, all thanks to Six Degrees." The set-up begs comparisons to a pyramid scheme, which can be
illegal when money is exchanged on unfulfilled promises of great returns.
But Six Degrees is driven by its own advertising scheme, not financing
from users. It is a pyramid that peddles ads and Internet networking
only. The company goes to great lengths to assure users that it won'
t sell the personal information they provide, only raw data from occasional
surveys. A rigid policy prohibits spamming or "any form of mail that can
be interpreted as junk mail or mail generated via a distribution list
which the recipient has not specifically requested." Six Degrees also
is a certified member of TRUSTe, the business consortium that seeks
to bolster consumer confidence in Internet security and truth-in-advertising.
By policy, Six Degrees won't add anyone to a user's list without
e-mail confirmation that the person wants to join. It insists on planting
cookies in users' browsers and e-mail to help to ascertain users'
identities. In exchange for traffic at its site, Six Degrees sells advertising
on the site and its demographic information compiled from member questionnaires.
Ads are sprinkled at every juncture, but users are not forced to sign
up for anything as a condition of membership. Members are asked, however,
to agree to sample at least one of several services, such as the
Los Angeles Times Web site. Logging in brings users their own personal bulletin board, where
only their first-degree circle may post messages. A powerful internal
search engine lets users locate those with similar interests, contact
Six Degrees members worldwide and spin out from their sphere of influence.
A free yourname@USA.net email address is provided for all members
of a users group, but it is not necessary to enter the Web site to
check it. A mail-forwarding program permits notification whenever
something new is entered in a user's first-degree area. Membership has other privileges. Premium savings are offered for
Egghead Computers and other online vendors under agreement with Six
Degrees. Mr. Weinreich says his company has had to constantly update its
hardware because of the demands caused by rapid growth. But he vows
to stay on top of the site's wave of popularity. "When we started, I said we were going to build the largest database
in the world, a place where people can build a virtual community,"
Mr. Weinreich says. "You ain't seen nothing yet." CHART(S): (DMN) Friend of A Friend ... PHOTO(S): 1. Richard Farina, Mr. Pynchon's classmate at Cornell University . Mr. Pynchon was best man in Mr. Farina's wedding to. 3. Mimi Baez, Joan's sister. Mimi was a performer in The Committee, a late 1960s San Francisco improvisational troupe with. 4. Barbara Bosson, who played ditzy Fay Furillo in Hill Street Blues and was then married to. 5. Steven Bochco, the producer of Hill Street Blues, L.A. Law, Murder One and NYPD Blue featuring. 6. Intense , mercurial actor David Caruso who left NYPD Blue to pursue "other opportunities." ; LOCATION NOTE: Photos #1, #2, #3, #4 and #5 were not sent to the library for archiving.
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