Knowing this has been discussed a bunch lately in various outlets, and after reading:http://arstechnica.com/media/news/2009/07/european-publishers-want-news-access-controls-legislated.arsGot me wondering.First point, is real printed news dead? I believe so. Solution, go online which most are. Which brings up, ok how is this done. Most news outlets that are doing well are TV (local or CNN). Which brings up newspapers and the AP. AP is bitching(not in this article) but they are getting paid for all the news, unless its like CNN covering it. Newspapers are trying to go online, but only have local coverage, which they arnt getting paid for (bought for reprint elsewhere). Plus they are beat by big time conglomerate news sites like CNN and search engines like google and yahoo (I personally love yahoo's news section). So, who needs to pay for the news is what it comes down to? Readers dont, but they still want their fill of it. Govt dont care, unless it goes away and then they will, as either they then dont have access other than intel sources for stuff, or the people bitch to them.
7/12/2009 1:21:59 AM
i just want to say that i read the printed medias websites and if they go to a pay thing i would literally pay to read them. i don't watch tv. i'm not big on tv news stations websites. i'll go to cnn sometimes but not for in depth topics. i'll read anything that catches my eye on yahoo which is mostly ap, reuters, and politico. sometimes mcclatchy. and rarely like CSM.[Edited on July 12, 2009 at 2:01 AM. Reason : lots of realclearpolitics stuff]
7/12/2009 1:50:51 AM
Personally I wouldn't mind paying for news websites as long as the cost was similar to their print media. If the N&O tried to charge more for online material than the newspaper forget it.
7/12/2009 2:23:23 AM
I'd like it if they came up with package deals. Pay a certain amount a month/yr and get the print edition of the newspaper delivered to your door, plus exclusive access to certain premium news articles on the website (probably only possible with larger newspapers with certain well-known columnists/editors), plus customizable news updates sent via email or text, plus receive access to a digital newspaper archive where you can download any past printing of a newspaper in PDF format.This would effectively allow them to embrace modern technology while still encouraging people to read the old print media. They will also likely need to scale down future paper copies of newspapers to reflect the fact that people really don't have any time or any goddamn attention span these days. Some major news stories, classifieds postings, comics, opinion sections, and a page each dedicated to different specialized areas (i.e. movies, daily life, markets, etc) would go a long way towards this. It'd also cut back on how much paper we use and have to recycle (i.e. reduced energy expenditure).[Edited on July 12, 2009 at 8:51 AM. Reason : 13331, w00t]
7/12/2009 8:41:57 AM
Information wants to be free.
7/12/2009 9:10:56 AM
Collecting and compiling information is not free.
7/12/2009 9:26:26 AM
Both of those posts make a good point.If the print media, or any media, consistently gave me something other than regurgitated lines from political press offices I'll pay for it. The problem is, nothing defines most press outlets other than geographical orientation. I pay, and pay well, for the Economist every year because it is the tits. I don't pay for local news because they rarely go beyond the what into the why.A good muckraking investigative journalist could still make money.
7/12/2009 10:50:22 AM
the only times i've read a print newspaper in the past few years is either when i'm at my parents' house and it's on the table during breakfast or while riding the subway in the morning when i was in nyc
7/12/2009 11:24:00 AM
^^^So? Information still wants to be free.If someone observes something, records it somehow, then "re-plays" it for others (a journalist,) -- then yes, that is a service that they can choose to charge for. But the information itself is separate, and "wants" to be free.... particularly because it's news, and not intellectual effort/creativity. Certainly the author should have an attribution license to get "credit" for being the original author of any editorial content that accompanies the news... but they shouldn't "own" it. Just because someone reports news, doesn't mean they should have exclusive rights to the publishing of that news. Anyone should be able to re-report the same news to others freely without permission from the original reporter.
7/12/2009 11:29:40 AM
^so what the hell are you arguing? There shouldn't be subscription websites or pay news services?
7/12/2009 12:00:17 PM
^^ Yeah, I don't know what you're getting spun up about. I wasn't disagreeing with you. I was just saying that if an organization can provide me with accurate and timely information, I will pay for that service.Besides, information neither wants to be free nor wants to be sold. It is an inanimate, intangible, object. It is only what the sender and the receiver want it to be.
7/12/2009 12:32:48 PM
what you're not mentioning here is that newspapers aren't failing for a lack of subscribers (subscriptions rarely covered much more than the costs of printing). they're failing because advertising models have changed and they can't charge as much for ads. that on top of craigslist basically killing the classifieds section.
7/12/2009 1:00:08 PM
7/12/2009 1:49:46 PM
7/12/2009 2:04:36 PM
i think the point you're missing Willy Nilly is that information gathering and aggregation IS DEFINITELY NOT FREE. to use your Library example further. Sure PUBLIC libraries are free to use, however they aren't free to operate. While there are some volunteers used who work for free, the administration and book purchases are publicly funded. This is because we as a society feel that libraries are a public good and should be accesible to all. There are of course Private libraries which charge a membership fee to use and can't be used by the general public.Now lets relate back to the news... as a thought experiment, lets think through what happens if the AP, CNN, BBC, and others completely stop covering the news. You will say nothing will happen because twitter and blogs will still continue to cover events. While the "huge" events in which thousands of people are direct witnesses to it will still get coverage from twitter and blogs, the smaller events will get very little coverage because simply few people will twitter or blog about them.
7/12/2009 2:18:55 PM
7/12/2009 2:27:45 PM
7/12/2009 3:04:55 PM
"OK" = acceptable for NBC to re-write the AP article and present it as their own.It seems as if your answer would be yes (provided they didn't lift any editorial content?).Do you believe patents to be wrong also?[Edited on July 12, 2009 at 3:18 PM. Reason : ]
7/12/2009 3:16:55 PM
After some further investigation, I've figured out the "argument" in this thread: Willy Nilly just makes a bunch of airy statements that don't say shit and he hopes that someone latches on to it. It's like a troll except I think he genuinely believes what he is writing is meaningful.
7/12/2009 3:22:27 PM
I think the Triangle Business Journal has a "decent" revenue model. You have the option of paying for it and get a paper copy delivered. Some of their online content is premium content that you can see immediately if you're a subscriber. After about 4-5 days the premium content becomes visible to everyone.
7/12/2009 3:46:52 PM
^^Dude, what is your fucking problem? Stop fucking trolling me. If I said something you don't understand, specifically ask about it. Being dismissive makes you appear to be the dumb one.^^^If they re-wrote it, only using the facts, that's fine. AP doesn't (shouldn't,) own the facts. If there is editorial content, like I said, it would depend on the license. If AP has an attribution license on the story, then NBC couldn't use it without giving credit -- but they could still use it. If AP doesn't have an attribution license on the story, then yes, NBC could reprint it verbatim as their own. I'd expect that AP and others would choose to release the reports with an attribution license....
7/12/2009 3:51:12 PM
7/12/2009 4:12:52 PM
I think the solution here is a new form of the AP.Journalists need to band together and form their own pooled orgnizations. Consumers can invest in pools, rather than paying for the news delivered to them.For instance, I have an interest in technology and political corruption. I spend my $19.95 a month to fund a journalist pool to investigate those areas. In return I know I am getting high quality, well sourced and researched publications. This kind of pooling would allow for the return of longterm investigative journalism, and would allow journalists and their community a way out of the 24hour news cycle that values sensationalism over substance.It wouldn't take a large user base, and it would be information sharing. When a story is finally released, the author shares ownership with the investors (who are the primary readers). Any money made from that article being licensed or repurposed would go back to the whole organization. Almost a stock market for news, where you invest in the quality of the story, not the story itself.It would be important to keep these pools large and fairly generalized though, to allow journalists the flexibility to pursue stories of merit and to prevent takeover by special interest.
7/12/2009 4:23:24 PM
7/12/2009 8:06:26 PM
^Thank you.The "stealing your work" part may actually be the fucking worst of all. I met one of my sister's former neighbors at one of her house-parties, and he actually, calmly and proudly informed us that his ENTIRE line of work comes from browsing the internet, finding new websites that use unpatented methods, and proceeding to attempt to get the patent himself. I have never come closer to wanting to choke the life out of someone before. I hope he dies of painful ass cancer.With copyright (which is totally fucked, by the way,) at least it's been ruled that you automatically get the copyright to whatever otherwise uncopyrighted expression you make, without having to register it. Why the fuck they don't do that with patents is clear evidence that the entire system is fucked and only serves the rich-stay-rich corporatist oligopoly. Furthermore, patents are routinely given to way-to-general inventions. For instance, the two biggest toy companies fought over the patent to games involving trading/collectible cards. They both hold virtually identical patents -- one for trading card games, and the other for collectible card games. No one, no one, can design and bring to market their own trading card game without battling one or both of these behemoths. A fucking patent on the mere fucking idea of a ANY card game -- ANY -- that involves cards that are collected or traded??? Fucking crazy. I wouldn't be surprised to find out that there's a patent on the concept of board-games. And I recently heard about someone that patented a rather novel dog toy ( ) the stick. This is fucking madness. I don't care what anyone says.... patent law is 100% fucked. http://www.google.com/patents?id=hhYJAAAAEBAJ
7/12/2009 8:56:19 PM
7/12/2009 9:23:42 PM
^^^ Thand ^^ obviously have no idea how patents actually work.
7/12/2009 10:50:57 PM
7/12/2009 11:55:06 PM
7/13/2009 3:04:52 AM
7/13/2009 9:16:39 AM
^you mean by spending more on R&D than any other software company in the world?Most of our research is published completely publicly, whether or not a patent coincides with it. We also EMPLOY a large number of people who do nothing but innovate for the sake of innovation, not for patents. While it is true that MS has a sizeable patent portfolio, it is not a "patent machine" the likes of which you and Willy are referring to.Hell, even compared to Apple (which has a relatively small patent portfolio), Microsoft's patents are VERY implementation specific to it's existing products and markets. Again, I don't think you have any idea what you are talking about. Feel free to peruse the results of 8 billion dollars a year in publicly accessible, collaborative, and shared research here http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/
7/13/2009 9:39:55 AM
how much of that budget is spent on legal teams? until you can answer that, your statement means nothing. Edison could have probably made a similar claim back in the day, yet his entire business model was based around the concept of stealing the work of others for himself.
7/13/2009 12:59:19 PM
Microsoft's legal budget is not tied to it's R&D expenditures. You go look it up, it's all in the SEC filings. You're wrong. You obviously didn't even look at the damn site.
7/13/2009 10:35:06 PM
care to offer any proof that Microsoft's R&D budget doesn't include legal costs for making a clusterfuck out of the USPTO, or do you want me to just believe it for no reason? Is there a reason why microsoft spends so much money on R&D, only to be playing catch-up with Google, Sony, and Apple? Apple gets 10 times more out of their R&D dollars than Microsoft does, which makes you question if that's because Apple does real R&D and Microsoft spends their money stealing R&D from other companies.
7/13/2009 11:40:23 PM
^Dude are you on prescription medications or something?The proof is in the damn annual report. You are the one making gross accusations, the burden is on you, not me. From the Annual Report (8.1 billion spent in 2008):
7/14/2009 1:12:55 AM
so you're saying that Microsoft hasn't paid out huge settlements for IP theft in the last few years, and that the Microsoft OS isn't riddled with stolen code from linux and sun? I'm glad that you've bought into the company line so hard, but it would be cool to see you post information from somewhere other than Microsoft's own propaganda pages to support your claims.
7/14/2009 9:49:06 AM
7/14/2009 11:41:40 AM
7/14/2009 6:05:47 PM
i tell you one thing i WONT do is get one of those amazon kindles that ssupposed to beam nyties, wp, wsj etc to your kindle
7/14/2009 6:34:14 PM