According to this article in Businessweek, Apple's new Tablet will change the world.
What do you think?
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Monday, January 4, 2010
Politico a $20 million operation
It took Politico two years to become a $20 million operation. Surprisingly, PaidContent attributes much of the success for the political Web site and newspaper to Politico's print product, where advertising revenues considerably outperform online revenues.
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
User-created ads create rights conundrum
Ad Age had an interesting piece about companies creating ads using content from online users. One example was when an ad agency used photos from Flickr users with Creative Commons licenses but never asked permission, creating a dust-up.
Using Twitter feeds is another matter, however.
"For commercial use of photos, videos or text, you should cover yourself legally by asking. Not to mention it's polite," said Josh Peters, a social-media consultant who has written about the Toyota misstep. "It's an ethics and courtesy issue. In 30 seconds they could have saved face by asking him ... but they didn't bother."
Using Twitter feeds is another matter, however.
It's legally still a bit of a gray area, but generally when a person puts content out there using the social-media tools where content can be syndicated, they grant the world an implied license, said Evan D. Brown, attorney at Hinshaw & Culbertson.
Labels:
Advertising Age,
aggregator,
Creative Commons,
Flickr,
Stephen Weigand,
twitter
Friday, October 9, 2009
AP, News Corp bosses tell search engines to pay up
The comments from Tom Curley of The Associated Press and News Corp.'s Rupert Murdoch come as the media industry struggles in the Internet age. Many news companies contend that sites such as Google have reaped a fortune from their articles, photos and video without fairly compensating the news organizations producing the material.
"We content creators have been too slow to react to the free exploitation of news by third parties without input or permission," Curley, the AP's chief executive, told a meeting of 300 media leaders in Beijing.
Labels:
Associated Press,
content,
News Corp.,
Stephen Weigand
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Snapshots of papers that charge for content
PaidContent has an interesting piece that looks at how papers that began charging for online access are fairing. Most of the papers are small dailies and seem to be charging to protect their print edition.
Newspaper: Newport Daily News
City: Newport, R.I.
Circulation: 12,000
Pricing plan: Online-only subscriptions cost $5 a day, $10 a week, $35 a month, or $345 a year. Print and online combo subscriptions cost $11 a month or $100 a year. Obituaries, classifieds, blogs, and a copy of the front page are available for free online.
When pay wall was introduced: June 2009
Results: Publisher Buck Sherman told us that the goal was to “drive people back to the printed paper” and not to bring in online revenue. He says that so far “we have done well,” adding that single-copy sales are up 8 percent. Website traffic is down by about 30 percent since the paper began to charge, according to Compete figures.
Comment: The Daily News model grabbed headlines earlier this year because the paper was charging substantially more for the electronic edition of the paper than the print one. Competition is limited, with the much bigger Providence Journal pulling back on statewide coverage.
Labels:
newspapers,
online access,
paidContent,
Stephen Weigand,
subscriptions
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
The Death of Journalism (Gawker Edition)
WaPo reporter Ian Shapira wrote an opinion piece about how Gawker borrowed heavily from his article about a business coach who teaches business leaders how to deal with Millennials in the workplace (she's running a racket, in my opinion, but that's another issue). He said he felt triumphant at first and then his editor told him they ripped off his story. He spent a considerable amount of time and effort reporting the story and a Gawker writer spent an hour or so cutting-and-pasting and re-wording it — generating more than 9,500 page views for Gawker.
Here's Shapira's original story and here's Gawker's post about it. Anyways, something to chew on.
I started thinking about all the labor that went into producing my 1,500-word article. The story wasn't Pulitzer material; it was just a reported look at one person capitalizing on angst in the workplace. With all the pontificating about the future of newspapers both in the media and in Capitol Hill hearings, I began wondering if most readers know exactly what is required to assemble a feature story for a publication such as The Post. Journalism at a major newspaper is different from what's usually required in the wild and riffy world of the Internet. And that wild world is killing real reporting -- the kind of work practiced not just by newspapers but by nonprofits, some blogs and other news outlets.
Here's Shapira's original story and here's Gawker's post about it. Anyways, something to chew on.
Friday, July 24, 2009
AP Sets Up News Registry To Track And Protect Content Online
PaidContent.org has an item about AP's plan to track its content online.Following up on its spring promise of an industry initiative to protect news content online, the Associated Press board today approved an ambitious plan to tag and track every piece of text content for the co-op and its members—and eventually photos and video. The news registry will start by tracking AP content and is expected to add AP member content in early 2010. AP will fund it through 2010; it’s then expected to be self sustaining. One feature of the registry, which is being designed to work on payment models ranging from free to pay walls, is a “beacon” that will let the AP know how the content is being used.
Labels:
Associated Press,
content,
paidContent,
Stephen Weigand
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)