I Protest! How whitehouse.net came to be.
Although its now just for fun, whitehouse.net was originally started as a protest about
the way Network Solutions handled Internet domain name registrations.
Part I: Discovery
Set the way-back machine to late 1995. Bill Herrin receives an e-mail message from his
erstwhile companion, the Mailer Daemon. For those not already familiar with it, the Mailer
Daemon is a part of a computer program. When an email message can't be delivered, the mail
server software attempting delivery returns a message to the sender explaining what
happened. This message is "from" [email protected]. You get
one every time you send an email that bounces, its the computer equivalent of finding your
letter in your mailbox with "return to sender" stamped on it. The message Bill
received was no exception.
Bill was notified that [email protected] had attempted to send an e-mail somewhere
that was undeliverable.
This was strange. Bill owned and operated why.com and its mail server. A
hobbyist with a 24-hour a day dialup modem connection, he'd registered the name in early
'93. He and a couple of his friends had email there, and that was it. Who was this buffoon
abusing his mail server, and why was he claiming an address at why.net instead of
why.com?
A quick search of the 'net revealed that while retaining Bill's registration of
why.com, Network Solutions had also registered why.net to a small Internet Service
Provider in Texas. The "buffoon" was simply a confused customer.
The equivalence of the names why.com and why.net was obvious! Why had they been allowed
to register why.net? Bill did what any unsatisfied customer would do: he typed up a
complaint and sent it off to Network Solutions.
The reply was the epitome of blow-off letters. The meat of it was that .com and .net
were completely different so get lost you pathetic whiner. They were more polite about it,
but a blow-off is a blow-off.
"Those effing sons of guns," thought Bill, "they wouldn't blow me
off like this if I was the President of the United States."
Another quick search of the 'net. Whitehouse.com was then registered to the apple sauce
company, but sure enough, whitehouse.net was available. So, Bill did what any red-blooded
American would do.
Bill typed up an e-mail message, warning that anyone with a hundred dollars could
confuse the snot out of the American public by registering and misusing whitehouse.net. He
warned against Network Solutions' heinous policy. He mailed it off to none other than the
later self-proclaimed inventor of the Internet, then Vice President Al Gore.
Part II: Acquisition
Okay, fast forward a couple of months. Its now the begining of 1996. Bill and Chris
Mincer, a friend since way back in high school, are considering starting a web authoring
company. They're sitting and shooting the bull as old friends do, when Bill starts
complaining about his experience with why.net.
At the end of the story, Chris had just one question: "Is it still
available?"
"What, whitehouse.net? I don't know, let me check." So, Bill logged in to his
computer and checked. Sure enough, still available. And no reply from the Vice President.
So much for the power of electronic communication.
"Get it!" said Chris. So, Bill and Chris typed up the forms and emailed them
off to [email protected]. A week or two later, a misdirected email from a college
student intended for the President preceded Network Solutions' notification that the
registration had been completed by a couple of hours.
The email was a complaint from some college student at a religious university about
Clinton's godlessness. It begged for a reply, and since Bill and Chris happened to be
together at the time, they typed one up and sent it off.
Something about understanding him, and "feeling his pain." And oh yeah, we
believed that thus far we'd had the most successful Presidency since Rutherford B. Hayes.
Bill and Chris got a good laugh out of that one, and another out of sending emails to a
couple close friends from [email protected]. Then, they thought it would be a
lark to set up a web site and see how many people happened on it by mistake. So,
Chris came up with most of the jokes, they refined them together, and Bill put together a
web site that looked almost like the real whitehouse site.
About a hundred people a day stumbled on it, if the web logs were any indication. So,
Bill and Chris improved it, made the parody better. A month or so later, I believe it was
in March, a reporter at the Washington Post happened on it. That's when the site hit the
big time.
A story on the front page of the Washington Post's Metro section, continued on half a
page inside complete with photos of Bill, Chris, and one of the web pages. And it went out
on the A.P. news wire to get generally smaller stories in other papers. We peaked with
several hundred thousand hits in a single day a couple days later when Rush Limbaugh
mentioned the site on his radio program. Put this in perspective: It was 1996 and the site
had less than 10 distinct web pages. A couple hundred thousand hits a day was seen by few
web sites except Yahoo, and almost never for a web site containing less than 10 distinct
pages.
And the rest, as they say, is history.
Part III: Afterword
Aside from being a heck of a lot of fun, the experience with whitehouse.net has taught
me two bits of wisdom:
- Yes, they really would blow you off like that if you were the President of the United
States. As a matter of fact, they did.
- Yes, you can have the last laugh. The United States truly is the land of the
free.
-Bill
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