The Digitalists

New Perspectives on New Media

Posts Tagged ‘micropayments’

Study: 33 Percent of Digitalist Bloggers Would Pay Steven Brill to Just Go Away

Posted by Greg on June 26, 2009

I don’t want to keep blogging about paid content and micropayments; the concepts have been dumped on enough throughout the blogosphere, including right here. But when I read all the respectful MSM coverage still being given to Steven Brill’s Journalism Online, I start feeling like Will Ferrell’s character in Zoolander. I mean, why is anyone still listening to this guy? Am I taking crazy pills?

Brill had a couple business successes earlier in his career, including American Lawyer and CourtTV. But in the past two decades, he’s been far more famous for his flops: Brill’s Content, Contentville and, just this past week, airport-verification service Clear.

I don’t mean to suggest that people should ignore Brill because not all of his ventures have panned out; even the best entrepreneurs can’t be expected to bat 1.000. No, people should ignore Brill because, the more he talks about his plans for paid content, the more it becomes clear just how clueless he is. Read the rest of this entry »

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What Would Micropayments Mean for Journalists?

Posted by Greg on May 12, 2009

Like a bad case of herpes, the idea of micropayments refuse to go away, with News Corp now making noises about rolling them out this fall. To be fair, Murdoch’s plan sounds more realistic than the wishful thinking engaged in by the likes of Isaacson and Brill, since the Journal is proposing to use micropayments as an add-on to its existing subscription business and only apply them to niche subjects (though Jeff Jarvis remains skeptical).

What amazes me, however, is that while there has been much discussion about how micropayments would be bad for consumers, no one seems to have considered the fact that they would be an absolute disaster for journalists.

The argument for micropayments is usually couched in terms of how we must do something to save newspapers and the vital civic role they perform. If they go away, we are told, who will fund the Baghdad bureau? Who will be left to cover the statehouse and the city zoning-board commissions? And so apparently if we adopt micropayments, everything will go back to the way it was. Newspapers will become profitable again, reporters can once again be insulated from all that nasty business stuff that they never cared about in the first place, and everyone will get a pony.

As it happens, I agree that newspapers provide a civic good by covering important but less sexy topics. Which is why I’m dumbfounded that these micropayment enthusiasts haven’t figured out that charging for individual articles not only won’t save the Baghdad bureau, it will hasten its demise. Read the rest of this entry »

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