Monday, April 5, 2010

What if online news is put behind pay walls?

It’s 2012 and news is no longer free. Fall '09 indy media student Jean Kemshal-Bell edited Simon Dumenco prediction about “Life After the Pay Wall" published in Advertising Age.
It’s 2012 and news is no longer free. Michael Wolff, founder of the news-aggregation site Newser, is in prison, the first high-profile casualty of the 2011 anti-aggregation law. To avoid punishment the Huffington Post has turned into an Arianna Huffington fan-fiction site – and has better traffic than ever. It’s an era where news is luxury, where a yearly subscription to the New York Times cost $7,000. Mobsters are now trafficking pay-wall passwords because it’s more lucrative than counterfeit handbags. All paid-news consumers have to agree to a "Premium Content Code of Honor" that prohibits them from sharing news with non-subscribers.

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