U.S. Titan Sputters.AOL-Time Warner merger has little impact in Brazil--for now. THE RECENT MERGER OF AMERICA Online, the world's largest Internet service provider Internet service provider (ISP) Company that provides Internet connections and services to individuals and organizations. For a monthly fee, ISPs provide computer users with a connection to their site (see data transmission), as well as a log-in name and password. , and Time Warner, the world's biggest media conglomerate, hasn't made a ripple in Portuguese-speaking Brazil, Latin America's largest nation. "The merger doesn't mean that much for Brazil and Latin America," says Caio Tulio Costa, executive director of Universo Online, the world's largest non-English website with 650,000 subscribers in 2,000 Brazilian cities. "Its media content is in English and totally focused on the American market." The question, however, is how long Brazil will enjoy its holiday from the full onslaught of the new media monster. Executives at ZAZ ZAZ Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker (movie producers) ZAZ Zaragoza, Spain - Zaragoza (Airport Code) ZAZ Zaporozhsky Avtomobilny Zavod (Ukrainian car manufacturer) ZAZ Zaporojet Avtomobilnii Zavod , Brazil's second-largest Internet portal with 480,000 subscribers, are already gearing up to battle AOL (A division of Time Warner, Inc., New York, NY, www.aol.com) The world's largest online information service with access to the Internet, e-mail, chat rooms and a variety of databases and services. and others by investing heavily in a high-speed connection. "This is a difficult, dynamic and rapidly changing market," says Silvia de Jesus, executive director of ZAZ, which is owned by Spain's Telef[acute{o}]nica. "To date, AOL-Time Warner has failed to identify with the Brazilian consumer." Kirsten A. Powers, AOL's director of international communications, foresees the company's powerful new partner providing a boost to operations in Brazil. "With Time Warner's extensive presence in global markets, we envision many opportunities with our interactive music brands, magazines and cable programming," she says. "There's a whole new world ahead of us," adds Roberto Boaventura, president of Warner Music Brasil, whose labels include Atlantic, Reprise and Electra. "Through AOL's website, we can launch our artists, sell our products and include tour schedules and reviews." Botched botch tr.v. botched, botch·ing, botch·es 1. To ruin through clumsiness. 2. To make or perform clumsily; bungle. 3. To repair or mend clumsily. n. 1. launch. However, an inauspicious in·aus·pi·cious adj. Not favorable; not auspicious. in aus·pi debut seems likely to keep AOL from becoming Brazil's leading Internet provider anytime soon. When AOL entered Brazil last November it couldn't use its well-known domain name--aol.com--since a Curitiba-based Internet company had previously registered that address. When AOL failed to buy it back; it field a lawsuit, which is still pending. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , subscriber access is accomplished via www.americaonline.com.br. Then, some of the 20 million AOL installation disks distributed in shopping malls, stores and schools, or tucked into newspapers and magazines, turned out to be incompatible with some PCs and altered their browsers. As a result, the Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, city, Brazil Rio de Janeiro (rē`ō də zhänā`rō, Port. rē` thĭ zhənĕē`r consumer protection agency filed a court action to fine AOL US$1.5 million for subscribers who complained of complications resulting from installation. "They didn't do their homework," says Cora R[acute{o}nai, Brazil's leading Internet columnist for the Rio daily O Globo. "AOL knew there were similar problems when UOL UOL Universo Online (Brazilian internet provider) UoL University of London UOL Ultima on Line (multiplayer role-playing game) UOL Unit of Learning UOL Upper Operating Limit UOL Underwater Object Locator and ZAZ launched its service, but didn't learn from that lesson. Adding to AOL'S woes, Banco Bradesco a leading bank, shook up Brazil's Internet industry last December by offering free Internet access to its 8 million clients. Since then, many providers have followed the bank's freebie free·bie also free·bee n. Slang An article or service given free: "such freebies as subway and bus maps" New York. policy, with one company--Netgratuita--claiming to have signed up 806,000 subscribers in just two weeks. Powers, however, says AOL has no plans to give anybody free access. "We see two segments, one that is free and another which is paid," she says. "Both appeal to different kinds of users." To be sure, nobody is writing AOL-Time Warner off in the battle for the lucrative Brazil Internet market. Most here agree that they will be a tough act to beat once Time Warner's multimedia package is available online in Portuguese. To date, AOL translates a smattering of information on weather, sports, news and the day's horoscope horoscope: see astrology. horoscope Astrological chart showing the positions of the sun, moon, and planets in relation to the signs of the zodiac at a specific time. . But that is slowly changing. In recent months, AOL has forged agreements with the Jornal do Brasil Jornal do Brasil, widely known as JB, is a daily newspaper published by Editora JB in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It was founded in 1891 and is the third oldest existent Brazilian paper, after the Diário de Pernambuco and O Estado de São Paulo. and Gazeta Mercantil newspapers and is seeking other partners to beef up its Portuguese-language offerings. "If they translate their content into Portuguese, they could become unbeatable," says O Globo's R[acute{o}]nai. UOL's Costa predicts that AOL-Time Warner's mere presence will force local service providers to improve their quality so they can compete with a firm that owns such household names as CNN CNN or Cable News Network Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world. , Time and Warner Music. Still others predict the U.S. giant's future success in Brazil will be based more on economic muscle--AOL Latin America plans to issue some US$575 million in stock--than on Portuguese-language content. "With all the money they have, what if AOL Time Warner decides to buy UOL, or O Globo?" says Marcos Wettrech, president of iBest, a popular Internet firm that doles out awards for the nation's best websites. "That is the real threat." |
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