Newspaper Industry Decline, Newspapers | featured news

Newspass: Google's Micropayment System to Save Mainstream Media?

One of the biggest dilemmas for print and mainstream media today is how to transition from a free-for-all model to one where its users actually pay for the content they consume. Should each site enact its own paywall, forcing users to purchase a subscription to just that site? How about a pay-per-article solution, which would still require a separate login for each publication?

 

'Annie' comic strip ending after 85 years

'Annie' comic strip ending after 85 years

The iconic redheaded orphan Annie is ending her time on newspaper comics pages after 85 years....

 

Lenders Win Auction for Philadelphia Newspapers

A consortium of lenders have won control of Philadelphia's bankrupt newspapers from the local owners who fought to remain in charge.

 

News execs don’t want government handouts

News execs don’t want government handouts

Three quarters of editors and news directors polled say they have "serious reservations" about government funding of journalism, primarily for fear that independence can be compromised.

 

The Times to Charge for Frequent Access to Its Web Site

The Times to Charge for Frequent Access to Its Web Site

Starting in early 2011, visitors to NYTimes.com will get a certain number of articles free every month before being asked to pay a flat fee for access.

 

New York Times to Charge for Online Content?

New York Times to Charge for Online Content?

According to internal sources, the New York Times may soon be charging users for its online content. In a move that would bring the publication parallel to the Wall Street Journal, NPR, and the Financial Times, the New York Times seems to have settled on a system that would allow online readers to sample a certain amount of content before being prompted to subscribe.

 

Drive-by Traffic, They Say It Like It's a Bad Thing

Drive-by Traffic, They Say It Like It's a Bad Thing

Rupert Murdoch, and a couple of his fellow newspaper-owners, say that traffic coming from search engines and aggregation sites are worthless. They call it "drive-by traffic." These users only come, read one article and then leave. For an industry profusely bleeding users and revenue, you would think they wouldn't be so discriminatory when it comes to users consuming their content.

 

Journalism Has a Future, Murdoch Says

The FTC is holding a two-day workshop to examine ways the government can aid the struggling journalism industry. Rupert Murdoch and Arianna Huffington are among the panelists.

 

Don't bet newspapers will get rich shunning Google

There's an intriguing idea floating around the media: Microsoft Corp. wants to undercut Google so badly in Internet search that it might pay newspapers to withhold their content from Google....

 

Washington Post closing several U.S. bureaus

The Washington Post is closing its last U.S. bureaus outside the nation's capital as the money-losing newspaper retrenches to focus on politics and local news.

 

Subscribe to this RSS topic: Syndicate content