Vice is basically dead — Thousands of stories written over the past two decades could soon be deleted without any warning::CEO Bruce Dixon told staffers that Vice Media will lay off hundreds of employees and stop publishing stories on the site.

    • asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      It’s a double edged sword. Quality information should be accessible to everyone. We ensure that for kids through public school systems, but for adults you need to pay for it yourself. Which is a huge problems since that is the same demographic as “voters”.

            • asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Libraries are physical media. If you get public access to a newspaper, then one person can read it at a time. You also create a barrier for people to have to drive to a library, which might be closed, hope that nobody else checked out the thing, etc.

              It’s not at all a solution.

              • cheesebag@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Libraries are physical media

                Tell me you haven’t actually been to a library in the last 15 years without telling me.

                Have you not heard of Libby? Of Overdrive? Next thing you’re gonna be telling me Libraries aren’t a solution because not everyone can use microfiche…

    • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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      9 months ago

      Yeah, I understand that journalism needs to be paid for, but I don’t think paywall’s are much of a solution.

      I don’t want to pay a subscription for one publication’s news. I don’t even really want a subscription for a selection of publication’s news. I just want to read whatever I want to read and I’m happy to pay a reasonable amount for that.

      • cheesebag@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Could you explain more- so you want a la carte options, like pay on a per-article basis? And to be clear, you know that free high-quality print media has never been a thing historically, right? Like, you never could access all articles from the entire history of the NYTimes on demand for free, that was never a thing. The paper for that day was locked in a metal box you had to pay to open, and all you got to see was half the front page.

        Or, you know, support libraries…

        • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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          8 months ago

          you know that free high-quality print media has never been a thing historically, right?

          what gives you the impression that I wouldn’t be aware of that. I said in my comment that journalism needs to be paid for.

          In a perfect system, you buy some credit with a kind of clearing house, and then pay authors of whatever you wanted to read directly. A few cents a reader would net author’s a lot more than they’re currently receiving.

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        9 months ago

        Advertising seems to be a dead end. The patron model is starting, but it seems focused on certain personalities. I don’t believe anyone has developed a payment system yet that pays for cents at a time.

    • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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      9 months ago

      The problem with paywalled isn’t an unwillingness to pay for quality, its being attacked with a subscription when we don’t want to be locked into a single source. Today I want a good article on popular particle physics, tomorrow I want to know whats going on with education in Nigeria. Let me make a quick crypto micropayment with no fuss and I’ll read your article, try to make me a lifelong subscriber and get fucked.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          8 months ago

          I’m extremely skeptical of crypto but micro payments and donations seem like one of the most plausible applications for it since the infrastructure can be operated for basically free to receive money and there isn’t a large corporation taking a cut of every transaction unlike credit cards

          • Starbuck@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Which crypto network are you talking about that can be operated for free? PoW is expensive and wasteful, and PoS is pretty much back to a regular database again.

            At the end of the day here, this is a simple transaction ledger that doesn’t need to be turned into crypto, it just needs a party interested in moving the money around in these micropayments with minimal fees.

      • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        Thank you. In an age where every single company is trying to wring $5-10/month out of you, sorry, I don’t have the budget to subscribe to 10 different news wires. Now if we had a system of 25-50 cents an article, maybe even $1, that would be an entirety different story. I don’t give two shits about sports analysis, what’s happening on Broadway in NYC, or celebrity gossip. I read my news a la carte. The only exception is my town’s weekly local newspaper, which I buy for $1 at the hardware store.

        • Fubarberry@sopuli.xyz
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          9 months ago

          Chrome is looking into adding a website payment system, where you could have a refillable “tip jar”, and when you visit websites with paywalls they could pop up with the cost for that specific article. Hit yes, it deducts that from your tip jar, and you read the article.

          There are some similarities to a system that Brave browser already uses, except you generally earn money for brave’s version by allowing the browser to show you ads (although I’m pretty sure you can buy the credits directly too). Either way, the internet is moving towards needing to pay for content, and trying to find more convenient ways for users to do that.

      • wosat@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Exactly! Back in the day, you had two options: (1) subscribe or (2) buy a single magazine or newspaper. Now, there’s no equivalent to the newsstand for digital media.

        • hansl@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          I think you can charge per article on substack. Not entirely sure though.

          Some newspaper charge X$ for Y articles, I think the NYTimes do it or used to. It’s usually a horrible deal compared to monthly subscription, but I think that’s the point.

        • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          Not successfully. Been talked about for decades though. Seems like an apt real world non silk-road use for crypto currency. No login required, just a quick wallet transfer for a few cents and access is gained. Quick and cheap enough that’s its not quite worth it to muck around with 12 foot ladders etc.

          • hansl@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Companies were doing that with NFTs (which is what you’re describing) but now nobody want to touch an NFT so those companies definitely went bust.

            The best case will be companies who can hide the crypto behind the product, like “give us 5$ and we’ll give you 5 read-a-tokens which is totally not crypto btw”. Or wait a couple of years for crypto to come back in vogue.