Although the searchers were only identified by a numeric ID, some people's search results have become notable for various reasons.
Thelma Arnold Through clues revealed in the search queries,
The New York Times successfully uncovered the identities of several searchers. With her permission, they exposed user #4417749 as Thelma Arnold, a 62-year-old widow from
Lilburn, Georgia. This privacy breach was widely reported, and led to the resignation of AOL's CTO, Maureen Govern, on August 21, 2006. The media quoted an insider as saying that two employees had been fired: the researcher who released the data, and his immediate supervisor, who reported to Govern.
User 927 One product of the AOL scandal was the proliferation of blog entries examining the exposed data. Certain users' search logs were identified as interesting, humorous, disturbing, or dangerous. Consumer watchdog website
The Consumerist posted a blog entry by editor Ben Popken identifying the anonymous user number 927 as having an especially bizarre and macabre search history, ranging from
butterfly orchids and the band
Fall Out Boy, to search terms relating to
child pornography and
zoophilia. The blog posting has since been viewed nearly 4,000 times and referenced on a number of other high-profile sites. In addition to sparking the interest of the Internet community, User 927 inspired a theatrical production, written by Katharine Clark Gray in Philadelphia. The play, also named
User 927, has since been cited on several of the same blogs that originally discovered the real user's existence.
User 711391 A series of movies on the website Minimovies called
I Love Alaska puts voice and imagery to User 711391 which the authors have labeled as "an episodic documentary". ==See also==