3 February 2001

See related: http://cryptome.org/juno-puke.htm


From: "Dan Verton" <Dan_Verton@computerworld.com 
To: jya@pipeline.com
Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 11:02:27 -0500
Subject: Juno software

This is what Juno told me their "computational software" is related to.

Dan Verton

-----

NEW YORK, NY (February 1, 2001) -- Juno Online Services, Inc. (Nasdaq:
JWEB) today announced the establishment of the Juno Virtual Supercomputer
Project, a distributed computing effort of unprecedented scope that aims
to harness unused processing power associated with the free portion of its
subscriber base in order to execute computationally intensive biomedical
and other applications on behalf of commercial clients and research
institutions.
 
Juno is one of the nation's largest Internet access providers, with 14.2
million total registered subscribers and 4.0 million active subscribers in
December 2000.  While the personal computers owned by different Juno
subscribers have different performance characteristics, preliminary
studies recently completed by the company suggest that if the computers of
all of Juno's active free subscriber base were simultaneously working on a
single computational problem, they would together represent the world's
fastest supercomputer (measured in terms of aggregate instructions per
second), and might approach or break the "petahertz barrier" (with a
hypothetical effective processor speed on the order of a billion
megahertz).  Although the achievable effective computing power (and the
level of any associated revenues) are likely to be significantly lower in
practice for a variety of reasons, Juno's management believes that the
unused computing power of its free subscriber base represents a
potentially valuable asset from the viewpoint of both potential revenue
generation and potential contribution to society.
 
The company expects to focus particular attention on prospective clients
involved in bioinformatics research who are beginning to confront such
computationally demanding applications as the determination of the
structure of proteins encoded by gene sequences discovered through
recently completed efforts to sequence the human genome, and searching
through millions of "virtual molecules" to find promising candidates for
new pharmaceutical products.  Juno's management believes that many such
problems can be effectively divided into a large number of smaller
computational tasks in such a way as to capture substantial potential
gains in both speed and cost-effectiveness by comparison with traditional
supercomputing approaches.  Additionally, Juno's service is designed to
make it possible for customers to access very large amounts of processing
power over relatively short periods of time without having to bear the
high overhead costs associated with the in-house acquisition or rental of
conventional supercomputers or "computer farms."
 
The Juno Virtual Supercomputer Project will make use of patented
technology Juno currently employs in connection with its display of
advertising to download computational tasks to subscribers' computers for
processing offline during time when such subscribers are not using their
computers.  The results of such offline computations will then be uploaded
to Juno's central computers during a subsequent connection, in much the

same way that Juno currently collects responses to the advertisements it
shows offline.  Applications will run as "screen savers" on the computers
of participating subscribers when their machines would otherwise be idle,
performing calculations when the computer is on but not in use.  Neither
the download nor the operation of these applications are expected to have
any significant impact on the user experience or on the connection speeds
subscribers experience while using Juno.
 
Initially, Juno expects to recruit volunteers from among its millions of
subscribers to provide the computing power required for its early virtual
supercomputing activities.  Subscribers to Juno's free basic service may
ultimately be required to make their unused computing power available to
the project as a condition for using that service.  While the company's
billable subscribers may be offered the opportunity to participate on a
strictly optional basis in order to advance biomedical research and/or
other forms of scientific and technical progress, the company does not
currently expect to require the participation of such subscribers.
 
Juno also announced today that it has hired Yury Rozenman, formerly of
Applied Biosystems, to spearhead the Juno Virtual Supercomputer Project.
Mr. Rozenman, who joined Juno earlier this month as a vice president,
comes to the company with more than 13 years of scientific and
bioinformatics experience, predominantly in protein and DNA analysis and
its application to understanding biological processes.
 
"Pharmaceutical firms spend many years, and an estimated $400 million
dollars, for every drug that is eventually brought to market," commented
Rozenman.  "To the extent that groundbreaking new applications software
running on Juno's Virtual Supercomputer is able to bring lifesaving new
drugs to market in a fraction of the time and at a fraction of the cost,
this could be enormously valuable from both an economic and a human
perspective."
 
"We are excited about the prospect of teaming up with our subscribers to
offer researchers a supercomputing tool of extraordinary power," said
Charles Ardai, Juno's president and chief executive officer.  "We believe
this project has the potential to further diversify our revenue streams,
and in particular, to enable us to derive additional revenue from our free
subscribers.  If we can do so while making a significant contribution to
biomedical research, this would be even more gratifying."
 


Date: Fri, 02 Feb 2001 10:01:20 -0600
Subject: I think this answers the ?
To: jya@pipeline.com
From: Brian_Krebs@newsbytes.com (Brian Krebs)

I think this should answer the question as to what Juno
is doing with its new privacy policy.  Looks similar to the
SETI screen saver project that analyzes the Arecibo VLA output.

Brian Krebs
Newsbytes.com

-----

 Good talking with you.  Here's a copy of the release, as we discussed.
 
 =====
 Gary Baker
 Vice President, Public Relations
 Juno Online Services, Inc.
 212.597.9832 or bakerg@staff.juno.com
 =====
 
 Contacts:
 
 Gary Baker, Juno Public Relations
 (212) 597-9005 or pr@support.juno.com
 
 Becky Yeamans, Juno Investor Relations
 (212) 597-9274 or ir@support.juno.com
 
 Juno Announces Virtual Supercomputer Project
 
 Distributed computing facility to harness unused resources of Juno
 subscriber base, with theoretical computing power of world's fastest
 supercomputer
 
 NEW YORK, NY (February 1, 2001) -- Juno Online Services, Inc. (Nasdaq:
 JWEB) today announced the establishment of the Juno Virtual Supercomputer
 Project, a distributed computing effort of unprecedented scope that aims
 to harness unused processing power associated with the free portion of its
 subscriber base in order to execute computationally intensive biomedical
 and other applications on behalf of commercial clients and research
 institutions.
 
 Juno is one of the nation's largest Internet access providers, with 14.2
 million total registered subscribers and 4.0 million active subscribers in
 December 2000.  While the personal computers owned by different Juno
 subscribers have different performance characteristics, preliminary
 studies recently completed by the company suggest that if the computers of
 all of Juno's active free subscriber base were simultaneously working on a
 single computational problem, they would together represent the world's
 fastest supercomputer (measured in terms of aggregate instructions per
 second), and might approach or break the "petahertz barrier" (with a
 hypothetical effective processor speed on the order of a billion
 megahertz).  Although the achievable effective computing power (and the
 level of any associated revenues) are likely to be significantly lower in
 practice for a variety of reasons, Juno's management believes that the
 unused computing power of its free subscriber base represents a
 potentially valuable asset from the viewpoint of both potential revenue
 generation and potential contribution to society.
 
 The company expects to focus particular attention on prospective clients
 involved in bioinformatics research who are beginning to confront such
 computationally demanding applications as the determination of the
 structure of proteins encoded by gene sequences discovered through
 recently completed efforts to sequence the human genome, and searching
 through millions of "virtual molecules" to find promising candidates for
 new pharmaceutical products.  Juno's management believes that many such
 problems can be effectively divided into a large number of smaller
 computational tasks in such a way as to capture substantial potential
 gains in both speed and cost-effectiveness by comparison with traditional
 supercomputing approaches.  Additionally, Juno's service is designed to
 make it possible for customers to access very large amounts of processing
 power over relatively short periods of time without having to bear the
 high overhead costs associated with the in-house acquisition or rental of
 conventional supercomputers or "computer farms."
 
 The Juno Virtual Supercomputer Project will make use of patented
 technology Juno currently employs in connection with its display of
 advertising to download computational tasks to subscribers' computers for
 processing offline during time when such subscribers are not using their
 computers.  The results of such offline computations will then be uploaded
 to Juno's central computers during a subsequent connection, in much the
 same way that Juno currently collects responses to the advertisements it
 shows offline.  Applications will run as "screen savers" on the computers
 of participating subscribers when their machines would otherwise be idle,
 performing calculations when the computer is on but not in use.  Neither
 the download nor the operation of these applications are expected to have
 any significant impact on the user experience or on the connection speeds
 subscribers experience while using Juno. 
 
 Initially, Juno expects to recruit volunteers from among its millions of
 subscribers to provide the computing power required for its early virtual
 supercomputing activities.  Subscribers to Juno's free basic service may
 ultimately be required to make their unused computing power available to
 the project as a condition for using that service.  While the company's
 billable subscribers may be offered the opportunity to participate on a
 strictly optional basis in order to advance biomedical research and/or
 other forms of scientific and technical progress, the company does not
 currently expect to require the participation of such subscribers.
 
 Juno also announced today that it has hired Yury Rozenman, formerly of
 Applied Biosystems, to spearhead the Juno Virtual Supercomputer Project.
 Mr. Rozenman, who joined Juno earlier this month as a vice president,
 comes to the company with more than 13 years of scientific and
 bioinformatics experience, predominantly in protein and DNA analysis and
 its application to understanding biological processes.
 
 "Pharmaceutical firms spend many years, and an estimated $400 million
 dollars, for every drug that is eventually brought to market," commented
 Rozenman.  "To the extent that groundbreaking new applications software
 running on Juno's Virtual Supercomputer is able to bring lifesaving new
 drugs to market in a fraction of the time and at a fraction of the cost,
 this could be enormously valuable from both an economic and a human
 perspective."
 
 "We are excited about the prospect of teaming up with our subscribers to
 offer researchers a supercomputing tool of extraordinary power," said
 Charles Ardai, Juno's president and chief executive officer.  "We believe
 this project has the potential to further diversify our revenue streams,
 and in particular, to enable us to derive additional revenue from our free
 subscribers.  If we can do so while making a significant contribution to
 biomedical research, this would be even more gratifying."
 
 About Juno 

 Juno Online Services, Inc. is one of the nation's leading Internet access
 providers, with 14.2 million total registered subscribers as of December
 31, 2000, and 4.0 million active subscribers during that month.  
 
 Founded in 1995, Juno provides multiple levels of service, including free
 basic Internet access, billable premium dial-up service, and (in certain
 markets) high-speed broadband access.  The company's revenues are derived
 primarily from the subscription fees charged for its billable premium
 services, from the sale of advertising, and from various forms of
 electronic commerce. 
 
 For more information about Juno, visit www.juno.com/corp.  To get a copy
 of the Juno software, go to www.juno.com or call 1-800-TRY-JUNO.
 
 ###
 
 Statements in this press release regarding Juno Online Services, Inc. that
 are not historical facts are forward-looking statements and are subject to
 risks and uncertainties that could cause such statements to differ
 materially from actual future events or results. Any such forward-looking
 statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private
 Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.  The following factors, among
 others, could cause Juno's actual results to differ materially from those
 described in a forward-looking statement: limited history of offering
 Juno's billable premium services and free basic service in its current
 form; history of losses; failure to retain or grow Juno's subscriber base;
 increasing competition from existing or new competitors; inability to
 sustain current levels of subscriber acquisition or retention; inability
 to successfully migrate free subscribers to, or to retain subscribers in,
 Juno's billable premium services; rapid technological change; possible
 unavailability of financing as and if needed; decreases in the popularity
 of the Internet among consumers or as an advertising medium; specific
 risks associated with the development and implementation of the Juno
 Virtual Supercomputer Project described above, including risks that Juno
 will be unable to derive revenue from the program and risks relating to
 subscriber acceptance of the program, among others; possible industry
 consolidation; and potential fluctuations in quarterly and annual results.

 This list is intended to identify only certain of the principal factors
 that could cause actual results to differ.  Readers are referred to the
 reports and documents filed by Juno with the Securities and Exchange
 Commission, including the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed November 14,
 2000 and the registration statements on Form S-3 filed on November 28,
 2000, as subsequently amended, for a discussion of these and other
 important risk factors.