If Newspapers Claim They're Serving The Public... Why Are They Working So Hard To Limit Who Sees The Content?
from the questions-that-matter dept
One of the common refrains from folks in the newspaper industry is that, despite their inability to react to the changing market in front of them, they need to be kept alive, because of their civic duty of serving the public and preserving democracy. At least that's how the argument goes. However, Steve Yelvington points us to a good point made by Rick Edmonds, noting that if it's so important for the newspapers to serve the public, doesn't it make it much harder for them to do that behind a paywall. In other words, in their zeal to lock up the content, they're proving that they don't mean what they say when they talk about just serving the public. They really only mean that they're serving the segment of the public willing to pay -- which doesn't quite have that same noble civic duty feel to it, now does it?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: democracy, journalism, newspapers, public good
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The fatal flaw
Is it just because some people think information should be free? For example, a police department is also there to serve the public. But we can't just call 911 for our every whim. We can't have a police officer in every home.
Likewise, we can't say that just because people demand the news, then the news should be free.
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My objection is to those who try to artificially rig the marketplace to maintain their old, and largely outdated, business models. Their claims that they are serving the public only serve as propaganda to try and glean support for their attempts to regain control of the news through somewhat dubious means.
I can't blame them for trying but I don't have to like it.
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Re: The fatal flaw
Also, yes you can call 911 for every whim, as long as it is an emergency. You can call the local police non-emergency number for anything else. They do have a civic duty to "serve and protect".
In the world wide web, I am more apt to listen to the town criers that actually tell the news, then the ones that cry "pay me first for the news".
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Re: The fatal flaw
Bad analogy
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That's funny.
They are self serving
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Re: Re: The fatal flaw
The distinction between information and news doesn't change the stupidity of attempts to collude or get an anti-trust exemption, but it is an important distinction.
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Call it what it is
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Re: Re: Re: The fatal flaw
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Re: Yes they can
Or Like the RIAA assume you are an information thief and tax your internet connection, power, water, food supply so they can recover the revenue you are stealing from them.
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Re: Re: Re: The fatal flaw
Internet news is also supported by advertising, and consumers aren't running away screaming "I'd rather pay $10 a month than see these ads!!" So essentially, they're trying to tell news companies that ads throughout their news is a fair price to pay. Of course, some will do it more gracefully than others, and they'll win the crowd, but that's how it works out here in the real world.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The fatal flaw
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The fatal flaw
I would like to see a few examples of "internet news" that you refer to. Wholly original reporting (not gossip, not opinionism, not content aggregation) that is supported solely by online advertising. Can't think of any off the top of my head, but my mind is open to be educated.
Many sites that offer news free (Reuters, FoxNews, CNN) have either mammoth media companies or subscription models supporting them on the back-end, as well as many other complementary businesses in their portfolio. So saying the production of the news content, and distribution via internet is, "supported by advertising" is probably disingenuous. Online advertising is a drop in the bucket relative to the cost of that content creation...they are propped up by other means.
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civic duty of serving the public
I say again Civic duty? What a joke:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0K2pLo8JV5Y
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A Job's A Job
And if you want to complain that papers aren't doing their jobs, well, take a look in the mirror and ask yourselves what industry became the best friend to corporate boards, when it started writing software and manufacturing machines to eliminate jobs and independent thought on the bottom rungs of the print and broadcast industries.
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Re: A Job's A Job
Your job is being eliminated because your employers decided to stop producing actual journalism over the last few decades, and because your employers are refusing to adapt to changing times now.
It's not our fault. It's your boss's fault. And yours if you stay with their sinking ship.
(I'm not sure what H1B has to do with anything, but not all of "us guys" get hysterical about it, you know.)
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Newspapers
Makes no sense to me why this comment was even posted. The facts are that newspapers still are the number one source of information. (do your own research)
Every day, half of all US adults read a local/daily newspaper. Readers value their papers because they're portable, convenient, and offer highly valued information.
Nevertheless, online is not killing the newspaper world. Online news just don't have the resources to post the close net news that a local newspaper can publish. (don't forget, I wouldn't see my child or wedding annoucements online. If it were I would have most likely PAID for it.)
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS, it's the right thing to do to keep this world together.
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