(See abstract from Edupage at the end) Who wants to use the MTV web site anyway, but I suppose this could spread. I guess a very popular site could allow access only to domains (....foo.bar) that have paid instead of blocking those who have not, otherwise 'new' sites could circumvent it easily. On the other hand, a proxy server inside of an allowed domain would circumvent the allowing kind of scheme, at least for a while (until they found out about it). Great opportunities for hacking wars. Another payment scheme in use is to recieve passwords for closed Web pages by voice phoning to an expensive number. Did the porno sites invent this (they have long been in related business)? Asgaard ************************************************************************** MTV TURNS THE TABLES IN WEB VIEWING Viacom's MTV Networks has come up with a new way to make its Web investment pay off -- it's putting the squeeze on online service providers, demanding that they pay multimillion dollar fees or risk having their subscribers blocked from viewing MTV's Web site. <...>