BowieNet
BowieNet was an Internet service provider launched by singer-songwriter David Bowie in 1998 and active until 2006.
History
Bowie was an early user of the Internet, reportedly using email as early as the late 1980s. In 1996 he released the song "Telling Lies" as an Internet download, the first downloadable single by a major artist, and on 21 September 1999 he released his album Hours exclusively through BowieNet before its physical CD release on 4 October; the release made Bowie the first major artist to release a complete album for download through the Internet.In 1997 and 1998, Bowie worked with Robert Goodale and Ron Roy to understand the potential of the Internet as a resource for music distribution and fan outreach. BowieNet launched in September 1998, and offered dial-up service access to the Internet for $19.95 per month or £10.00 in the UK. Users with another ISP could pay $5.95 to access www.davidbowie.com. For the service, Bowie partnered with the network services companies UltraStar and Concentric Network Corp. At its peak, BowieNet had about 100,000 customers.
Some fans criticised the charging of a fee to access the site, claiming that "people were already having to pay for access to the internet, and now if they were going to have to pay for every single thing that they were interested in, that the internet was going to be the preserve of the rich forever". After heavily criticising the charging of a fee for BowieNet on other Bowie fansites, Irish fan Dara O'Kearney claims that Bowie himself started contacting him from the email address "bxqr@mindspring.com", singing off with the initials "db", to find out more about why O'Kearney disagreed with it so much. O'Kearney believed at first that the person was probably a Bowie impersonator, but later became more convinced that the person was actually Bowie, after he was able to put O'Kearney on the guestlist for the Dublin shows of his A Reality Tour in 2003.
In an interview with ZDTV, Bowie revealed that "at least two or three times a week I go into the rooms... on my site and anonymously, generally - there's some times, I have, I have a name that know, know me by, so they... I participate a lot more than they think!". He added "I got several, I got several, eh, addresses... so it would be very hard for them to... I know some of you know what they are but, eh, don't spam me...".
BowieNet ceased operating in 2006.