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Article written by tigtog

tigtog (aka Viv) is the founder of this blog. She lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves. You can read more about Viv on her bio page.

4 responses to “Murdoch: the current days of the Internet will soon be over”

  1. Cara

    My first thought, honestly, is about what it would do to blogging. What would blogging look like if bloggers have to pay to read news content — how would our ability to analyze a large swath of news be limited compared to the access we have now? How would blogging be limited even further than it is now based on socioeconomic status? And how would readership be limited when they can’t go to check out the source material themselves without paying?

    I’m obviously aware of the huge problems with a lack of funding for journalism. Something needs to be done. But I’d really like for there to be a way to fund journalism without limiting access to it.

  2. jupiter9

    You’re right, Cara.

    The fact is, most blogging sites and many other internet sites are supported by the investigative efforts of newspapers and other news gathering organizations, without recompense. I don’t think it would be right to require bloggers to pay to use it, but I’m not sure how else we could do it.

    It is too easy to separate content from advertising for advertising on the web to make up the same percent of the cost of producing the news as it does in print.

    ASCAP and BMI have essentially “site licenses” that allow a radio station, a store, a music venue to play music for a flat fee per month. Perhaps ISPs could do the same? But then everyone would use an ISP somewhere these fees aren’t charged.

    I have repeatedly tried to get the news organization I work for to hook up with Amazon.com, put links to books, CDs, DVDs and so on. The Amazon.com agreement gives you a commission on everything the user buys on Amazon.com that day, even if it’s not what you get them to click on. They’re still thinking about it, three years later.

    It’s depressing. We just let a huge chunk of our newsroom go last week, and it wasn’t because they weren’t doing their jobs. Many were at the top of their field. We just do not have the money.

  3. Meg Thornton

    As a former reader of Western Australia’s one and only daily newspaper I’ll be honest: I gave up my subscription to the paper because I didn’t see the point of paying for what they defined as “news”. I’m not interested in celebrity gossip, manufactured controversies, and whichever political agenda the owner of the newspaper is pushing this week. I want to know what’s happening, and I want to know it in as much detail as is legally possible. I want depth, I want background information, I want some discussion of the deeper issues. I wasn’t getting it, and I don’t know where I could get it from in the mainstream media – although quite often the blogosphere is the better provider in this respect.

    It’s worth pointing out I don’t register on the newspaper’s list of priorities as I’m a reader rather than a shareholder. They aren’t interested in satisfying me, because it would cost more. Instead, they’ll supply the celebrity gossip, the manufactured controversies, the easy stories, the rehashed publicity material, and say that’s “news”. Enough people will buy it to pay for the advertising space they’re selling to turn a fair profit, and the shareholders will be happy as a result. Let’s face it, the various media proprietors aren’t selling information – what they’re selling is advertising space, eye contact, and air time. They use news content to do this, the same way they use drama and human interest in things like reality television.

    The problem Mr Murdoch, and so many other media proprietors are having is because they’ve so saturated the market for the print media (newspapers, magazines etc) and the visual media (television, film, internet) that their readers and viewers physically don’t have enough time to consume more of their product. They’ve hit the edge of the time budget, and as a result they’ve run into the limit of what can be done. The visual ratio of content to advertising space has been exploited to its maximum and there is nowhere else for them to go. They’ll sacrifice journalism next, because the people who want actual journalism (such as myself) are a minority, and we’re able to be sold to the advertisers in other ways.

  4. DeusExMacintosh

    Dear Mr Murdoch,

    Read my keystrokes.

    I. WONT. PAY.

    All a blanket pay-for-content policy will do is empower those public behemoths you despise, like the BBC, who WILL continue to provide free news because they are legally obliged to provide this as a public service. You live by the shareholders, you die by the shareholders.

n.b. our posts are closed to new comments after 60 days. If you wish to discuss a closed post, please use the latest open thread.

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