More People Realizing That The News Finds Them... Not The Other Way Around
from the locking-up-news-doesn't-make-sense dept
We've been talking for a while about how these days, news is increasingly likely to find people rather than people finding news. This is a key point to understand in developing any kind of news related business model. It's about understanding how "passed links" or "earned links" are increasingly important. Many old school newspaper execs still think of news consumption via the old model: that someone chooses to go to a newspaper website and read through the news. But that's increasingly rare. Instead, the more common stories are the ones like Gina Chen explains, where news found her on Twitter. She didn't go looking for the particular story about the magazine Gourmet closing -- she spotted it because someone she followed who worked there mentioned it. People are increasingly getting important news from their social network "passing links" or even just passing on the news directly, rather than going to some centralized hub and "finding" the newsThis doesn't mean the old model is dead, but it's less important, and less a part of the news ecosystem as it used to be. And you know what's death for news "finding" people? A paywall. If content is behind a paywall, I'm much less likely to send it out to anyone else or let anyone know about it. It's just not worth creating that kind of hassle for others. Newspapers that decide to put up such a paywall are actively putting up a barrier to one of the major promotion and distribution mechanisms in how people find and consume news these days. It's difficult to see how that makes any sense at all.
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NY effin' T
Now, it's not quite a paywall, it's more of a nagwall. But I still said 'frak 'em' and went on with my day.
No chance I'm going to actually give anyone money for that crap.
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Re: NY effin' T
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No More Hierarchies
http://cluetrain.com/
from 1999!:
"Hyperlinks subvert hierarchy."
and
"People in networked markets have figured out that they get far better information and support from one another than from vendors. So much for corporate rhetoric about adding value to commoditized products."
seem like appropriate points...again :).
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Re: No More Hierarchies
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Had she not seen the Gourmet magazine tweet on someone's site, she would likely have seen it somewhere else, on cnn, on the evening news, a headline on the newspaper in the guy in the next seat in the subway the next day, people chatting about it at the watercooler, etc.
Twitter isn't replacing news sites, it's just replacing email and IM as they way some people are guided to the news, nothing more.
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Do you USE Twitter ? "on someone else's site" - it quite possibly arrived as an SMS on her mobile.
Get a name, will you ?
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Re:
It could have some as an SMS. It could have come as she scanned tweets. It could have come as an email forwarded from her sms because her phone wasn't reachable. Who knows?
The only point is this: The girl would not live in a bubble, had she not found out this way, she would have found out other ways. As I mentioned, she might have seen the news reading a newspaper over someone else's shoulder in the subway, or whatever.
It would be silly to think that she would never in her life know. At worst, she would find out next month when she went to buy the magazine (how quaint an idea that is) and discovered it wasn't there. She would still be informed, albeit somewhat more slowly.
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Re: Re:
She *could* have found out about it other ways. That doesn't mean it's likely. *I* probably would never have found out if Mike in turn didn't post about it.
You see how this works?
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Re: Re:
Twitter is a means, not the model. I have no idea why you're so hung up on it, since Mike only mentioned it once from a very specific example.
The point isn't that some specific technology is the key to the news doorway, it's that EVERY technology is replacing news as a centralized hub. You made the point yourself, but just didn't realize it:
"The girl would not live in a bubble, had she not found out this way, she would have found out other ways."
Exactly. This is EXACTLY Mike's point: news comes to you now, even if you're not actively seeking it out.
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News finding people
I think the "news" today is too much some arrogant, ill-informed, biased "commentator", who, after an initial surge of interest due to an apparently new approach, becomes a reason not to listen.
As a result, news is not important UNLESS it finds you! After the initial spike because something is new to you, why would you want to listen to the opinions of, say a doper ranting against dopers, like Rash Limburger, or whatever his name is.
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People Finding News
I guess it depends on what kind of news you want: Quick, easy and fun, but tainted and perhaps unbalanced, or more difficult to get but also more reliable and higher quality once you do. Kind of like deciding what kind people you want to date.
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Re: People Finding News
Most of the news that "finds you" isn't the stuff that's being jammed into your vision unrequested. It's the stuff from RSS feeds that you enjoy, Twitter posts that you follow, forum links that you stumble upon, news links that friends email you...
A lot of it is just told to you second-hand, like someone saying "Hey, did you hear about...?". Information like that you hear about then actively search a deeper understanding of.
The idea isn't that news articles start trickling towards you, and that suddenly becomes your entire knowledge base. It's that information is flowing so freely that going to a single place for news, or even seeking out news yourself, is less likely to happen than stumbling on interesting news completely by accident.
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Re: Re: People Finding News
Except that isn't news "finding you", that's news from sources that you've found and selected.
...news links that friends email you...
Unsolicited email, even if from friends, family, etc. Now you're starting to talk about the kind of selective, filtered news that "finds you". I've found that the selectivity often tells me more about the source of the news than the news itself.
A lot of it is just told to you second-hand, like someone saying "Hey, did you hear about...?".
And I've heard some real whoppers like that. Not exactly what I'd consider a reliable channel but I'm amazed at the number of people who seem to think it is.
The idea isn't that news articles start trickling towards you, and that suddenly becomes your entire knowledge base.
For many people it does. They almost never do any investigation on their own.
It's that information is flowing so freely that going to a single place for news, or even seeking out news yourself, is less likely to happen than stumbling on interesting news completely by accident.
Because just sitting back and accepting the news that happens to come to you is far easier that going out looking for yourself.
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