11/23/2009 12:07:52 PM
on the other hand, imagine a news industry where no one can afford to pay reporters for anything other than the most popular stories.
11/23/2009 12:08:41 PM
I concur
11/23/2009 12:09:24 PM
NET NEUTRALITY
11/23/2009 12:10:13 PM
this should be fun
11/23/2009 12:13:17 PM
i mean do you guys really think the business model of "pay a bunch of people to create some stuff and then give it away for free" is sustainable?[Edited on November 23, 2009 at 12:23 PM. Reason : j]
11/23/2009 12:23:20 PM
Wow, this won't end well...
11/23/2009 12:26:22 PM
11/23/2009 12:31:46 PM
Not really. The only newspapers that are getting along are the ones owned by the large conglomerates like newscorp. And thats only because Murdoch has other successful ventures (fox news) to subsidize the rest. If you give away your content for free what will eventually happen is that good reporting will die off and be replaced by things like fox news because its infinitely more profitable. Small newspapers are going out of business as ad revenue goes to the web and circulation drops. Ad supported means you must write content to sell the most ads.
11/23/2009 12:38:13 PM
web advertising is not profitable for the advertiser or the site hosting the ads. google charges a shitload of money to advertisers, and then passes on a pitance to the sites they actually display the ads on. Because google has a monopoly on search and web advertising, this isn't likely to change. If many sites leave google for bing or whatever other engine, google would have to rethink their ad payments in order to get that content back.
11/23/2009 12:42:47 PM
11/23/2009 12:56:40 PM
I would have no problem paying for an ad-free experience.The key word there being "ad-free."
11/23/2009 12:58:56 PM
the real issue here is that having News Corp site stuff on Bing or whatever isn't going to be something that lifts Bing above other search engines. the average net user won't care, they'll just go to whatever else moves to fill in the holes.Murdoch is cutting off access to Google in spite of himself, not considering the realities of how people get to his news in the first place. He wants to control the on-ramps to his content, which has been shown to be a way to place yourself on the fast-track to irrelevance.
11/23/2009 1:04:05 PM
"Newspapers aren't doing as badly as you think."http://www.slate.com/id/2233849/
11/23/2009 1:09:10 PM
holy crap, look at that guy rationalize! that article is full of lol's.
11/23/2009 1:14:39 PM
^^ thats the kind of shoddy reporting that we can expect from free sources. He starts off with: newspapers will die because ads will all go to the web!then he says: newspapers are so dumb! they've increased prices to make up for lack of advertising!!! this will only kill them off faster!lastly he says: newspapers aren't dying because the new york times increased prices and it made up (somewhat) for their decrease in ad revenue.all the while completely ignoring all the small newspapers that have already died off or cut back on reporting in order to stay alive[Edited on November 23, 2009 at 1:20 PM. Reason : a]
11/23/2009 1:19:11 PM
11/23/2009 1:40:11 PM
This has happened in the telecom world twice. Both times we called it "Ma Bell."
11/23/2009 1:55:20 PM
I'm not against MS competing against Google. I'm against it artificially dividing the internet.
11/23/2009 1:56:49 PM
all division on the internet is artificial. the internet is artificial.
11/23/2009 8:46:30 PM
I totally hear you on long-format news. It's dying because of the internet. It's a shame. But how are search engines exacerbating the situation? There's symbiotic relationship between search engines and content providers. I can't think of any reason a newspaper wouldn't want to be indexed, and Google is the last company they should be trying to milk for cash. Yes, the newspapers need to think of new ways of making revenue. This scheme is not the way. It will hurt the consumers and lead to less traffic for newspapers. The only entities it will benefit is Microsoft (who has now apparently ended the "fair and square" phase of its attempt to compete with Google) and a multinational media conglomerate.
11/24/2009 12:02:29 AM
why is it a shame?
11/24/2009 12:18:03 AM
There's plenty of long-form journalism occurring exclusively online. Take Ars Technica as one example. They have plenty of standard-length articles on a variety of subjects, plus in-depth analysis and discussion of more interesting topics. And they're not unique in that, at all.The one downside to Internet-based news sources is that a lot of them tend to skew either towards technology reporting or political reporting (often slanted one way or another). There's not really a great variety beyond that.
11/24/2009 12:26:35 AM
^^^ It means that there is no such thing as "artificially dividing the internet". There is nothing natural about the internet, so any change to it is artificial.What you meant to say is that you are against information silos on the internet. There's a giant difference. And I can think of MANY reasons why, as a content provider, you wouldn't want to be indexed.Forget newspapers for a minute. Do you blame the record companies for not allowing their music to be indexed and viewed for free, without restriction? Do you blame academic journals for not being indexed and viewed for free, without restriction? You forget that TRAFFIC has never been the issue. REVENUE is the issue. Newspapers don't make money from traffic. Microsoft would essentially be paying News Corp for a subscription to their content, and would then attempt to defer that cost through advertising.That means for the longterm, readers will get more content, of higher quality. The tradeoff? They would need to use a specific portal to access it. There's nothing new or earth shattering about it.^^Because short-form news rewards quantity over quality, and rewards sensationalism over substance or accuracy. Think of it as books versus magazines... now imagine that books were all slowly turning into one page magazine articles... it's a shame.^There isn't "plenty" taking place. Outside the worlds of technology and product discussions, and humor, it's a giant void. I don't know where you think there is long-form, journalistic political news online, because I've yet to see it aside from the traditional media outlets.And you can't point to tech journalism as the answer, because it's in a unique position where the industry supports the journalism to fuel it's own popularity. And arguably that presents a conflict of interest in more than a few cases (though reputable sites like Ars take great care to avoid this).[Edited on November 24, 2009 at 12:32 AM. Reason : .]
11/24/2009 12:28:25 AM
11/24/2009 12:35:47 AM
Noen, no offense, but you typed yourself right past the point I was making. You agreed with it while disagreeing with it. I said that there's a fair amount of it online, BUT it's mostly limited in topic matter. Fairly simple.
11/24/2009 12:37:06 AM
11/24/2009 2:46:18 AM
11/24/2009 8:12:11 AM
holy batman!but really, i'm enjoying this discussion
11/24/2009 8:15:01 AM
Google and other ad brokers make money by selling ad space to advertisers at a premium.Websites make money by giving google ad space on their websites for almost nothing. There is a massive disparity between what google charges the advertiser and what they pass on to the site displaying the ad. Unless you're hugely popular and your consumers are dumb enough to click ads, you wont make any money. As it turns out the stories that are most popular are the ones consumed by people dumb enough to click ads. So instead of writing shit that is good, you write shit that will be popular. Web advertising, SEO, and other bullshit marketting crazes are leftovers from the .com bubble.
11/24/2009 9:16:34 AM
11/24/2009 9:20:19 AM
Obviously google didn't create the concept, but they're certainly moving it forward. I mean look at cable vs broadcast tv. Cable exists because people are willing to pay extra for content that isn't popular. The google version of the internet is broadcast tv. Sure there are a few good shows here and there, but the majority is shit. Then you move up to cable and you get much more specialized shows. And then you move on to the premium channels and suprise suprise its the best content.
11/24/2009 9:33:53 AM
Network news v. cable news.Championing the quality of cable TV isn't bolstering your argument.And again, I'm not arguing that news sites shouldn't try to find new revenue streams. I'm arguing that this new idea is terrible.[Edited on November 24, 2009 at 10:18 AM. Reason : ]
11/24/2009 10:17:31 AM
^it's the only idea I've seen that builds an positive content quality cycle. From that perspective I think it's a GREAT idea. The current news content models are all operating on a degenerative content slide. More topics, less depth, less accuracy, more sensationalism. There needs to be a course correction before the industry tanks completely and journalists stop practicing and move to other industries.Your perceived inconvenience of needing to use two content portals instead of one is absolutely insignificant in comparison to a world without in depth news and investigation.
11/24/2009 6:53:09 PM
11/24/2009 9:28:56 PM
11/25/2009 8:14:35 AM
This thread is funny...Lets see... how is this going to affect my life??Well, if my google toolbar on top of my firefox browser doesnt take me to news corp websites, it seems that I will never go to news corp websites anymore, unless I happen to already like them and frequent them directly via a bookmark I already have.And since bing/live/ms search account for a small percentage of searches on the net, I guess these subsidiaries of news corp are happy with no longer getting viewed by the majority of people who do searches for relevant topics... My life without news corp sites doesnt seem to be a world lacking something important, so ... moving on ... let MS try to pay its way out of sub-par search results ... it wont affect me at all
11/25/2009 8:47:02 AM
^thread winner.
11/25/2009 8:52:24 AM
11/25/2009 10:51:44 AM
11/25/2009 11:40:17 AM
11/25/2009 1:34:01 PM
we're talking ab out NEWS CORP here, guys.This is not much worse than losing the national enquirer from google search.WSJ is the only worthwhile rag that they have, and very little of the content is free anyway. [Edited on November 25, 2009 at 1:48 PM. Reason : asdf]
11/25/2009 1:47:49 PM