Also considering that NYTimes is a major news contributor to Twitter, Techmeme and our own HN, I wonder if this is implemented, what the impact will be!
Let's be realistic. The NYTimes will still get plenty of links. The first comment on all of them (heavily upvoted) will be "email: bugmenot@mailinator.com password: bugmenot". The second comment will be "Why do people keep posting links to the NYT? Paywalls sucksorz, yo."
And half of the people upvoting these two comments will think that their startup will succeed on ad revenue where the NYT failed.
Didn't they read/listen the "Free" book by 'Chris Anderson' (posted here on HN few days back)? Who will pay to read the news? Who will pay to read the blogs? I feel sorry for the news site and the business in general, but I am afraid this strategy isn't going to work. Will be happy to be proven wrong!
In fact donation may work even better!
I'm really sorry to say that, even though I really like the quality of NYT articles, I won't pay nearly that much. Maybe $0.99/month, but I can't justify the $5/month.
It's slightly sad though; all of their articles that are posted on HN are quality material.
A $0.99/month is almost as much of a problem. Most times that I hit NYT it's because of a link here or on a blog or someone emails it to me. That amounts to probably 1-2 per week. That disappears with a paywall.
No way in the world I will pay for this. Nothing that special in the NYT to me. They are already close to going out of business as is. This won't make it any better.
I'm bored with the endless speculation. I wish they'd go ahead and actually try it instead of sending up endless trial balloons. If it doesn't work they can try something else after 3 months.
They tried something similar with TimesSelect and then pulled back; their columnists were at a disadvantage in online conversations.
They should first try more aggressive interstitials -- or even a 12-24 hour embargo of fresh news -- both of which only paid subscribers can skip. Then they get the inlinks, and people in a race to link/comment are most likely to pay.
(And the idea that they want print subscribers to pony up $2.50/month for online access? Petty. You'd think they could throw it in for the $300-$400/year print delivery costs!)
I think that it is a good idea/experiment to start charging web-users for news content (and I'm surprised that all six previous comments criticized the move)
As for Anderson's "Free" book mentioned in a previous comment, that book isn't free and I suspect that Anderson won't make the content free for downloads.
Ultimately, we live in an age where people pay $4 for latte and iPhone users pay money for cheap-to-develop, crude entertainment apps.
Sending reporters to Afghanisthan, covering the war in Iraq, tracking child abuse in Congo or investigating political corruption in Washington is an expensive proposition.
So ...to the people who like the news/analysis, but won't pay for it, please consider whether the NYT (or your other favorite newspaper) is really worth less than the other things that you spend money on.
Free seems to be a relative term. From Germany I get the following:
"Sorry, this content is geographically restricted
Due to our agreements with our publishing partners, the document you requested is only available to users located in the United States."
I tried this out (in the US).
Downloads don't work, printing returns an error "Printing has been disabled" and reading it with scribd is pretty inconvenient.
I guess the point is that you can read it for free if you're willing to put up with a lot of inconvenience.
Maybe they should get rid of the adless login/register interstitial first (read: stop bouncing readers before they serve an ad). I don't know if they can make it with just ads, but with the way they're doing it they are doomed to failure. A while back there was a post about how plentyoffish had ads on nytimes.com. So plentyoffish is stickier/has higher cpms than nytimes? Pathetic. A lot of their articles they don't even provide a comments section (easy page view doubler). Their UI looks like it was designed by a 19th century type-setter. I know they're trying not to stray from the brand, but the brand is good writing, not ancient design.
The problem with charging for news sites is less about how many of your regular readers are willing to pay for the content and is more about how people interact with your site. The majority of news articles on the web are accessed through linking from other sites (Google, blogs, etc). If you put up pay wall, you instantly lose most of that traffic.
WSJ works around this by giving access to people coming from outside links, but I'm not sure how well that model works:
23 comments
[ 29.1 ms ] story [ 299 ms ] threadAnd half of the people upvoting these two comments will think that their startup will succeed on ad revenue where the NYT failed.
But I still agree that NYTimes will still receive a fair bit of links but also believe it will decrease to some extent.
The main problem is, nobody will find the article in the first place, because no one will subscribe to read it.
It's slightly sad though; all of their articles that are posted on HN are quality material.
I hope they realize.
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display...
They should first try more aggressive interstitials -- or even a 12-24 hour embargo of fresh news -- both of which only paid subscribers can skip. Then they get the inlinks, and people in a race to link/comment are most likely to pay.
(And the idea that they want print subscribers to pony up $2.50/month for online access? Petty. You'd think they could throw it in for the $300-$400/year print delivery costs!)
As for Anderson's "Free" book mentioned in a previous comment, that book isn't free and I suspect that Anderson won't make the content free for downloads.
Ultimately, we live in an age where people pay $4 for latte and iPhone users pay money for cheap-to-develop, crude entertainment apps.
Sending reporters to Afghanisthan, covering the war in Iraq, tracking child abuse in Congo or investigating political corruption in Washington is an expensive proposition. So ...to the people who like the news/analysis, but won't pay for it, please consider whether the NYT (or your other favorite newspaper) is really worth less than the other things that you spend money on.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/17135767/FREE-full-book-by-Chris-A...
(He explicitly mentions in the book that he's giving it away for free, so this is legit.)
My point about the relative value of news/analysis content vs latte etc. still applies
"Sorry, this content is geographically restricted Due to our agreements with our publishing partners, the document you requested is only available to users located in the United States."
WSJ works around this by giving access to people coming from outside links, but I'm not sure how well that model works:
http://machinist.salon.com/blog/2008/03/21/wsj/
And by subscribing with such little amount of money, you support the Internet environment, by increasing number of people paying for digital goods.