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Slashdot IRC Forum

The IRC forum with CmdrTaco and Hemos is now complete, and a log has been posted. They answered quite a few questions about Slashdot's subscription system, bigger ads, and other assorted stuff. Don't miss the question about pop-up ads.

21 of 400 comments (clear)

  1. Subscriptions by itsnotme · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After hearing/SEEING how much slashdot costs, and knowing that I'd like to keep reading slashdot, I decided to change my opinion from waiting until the BFA's become annoying and just to pay the subscription because I want to SUPPORT slashdot.. hell I dont care about the AD's. I dont block 'em but I also can IGNORE the ones I dont want to see.. (THose Thinkgeek ones rock!)

    But Slashdot folks do go through a bit trying to make sure that the ads are nonintrusive in that they're not popups and so on.. now THOSE would make you want to run away wouldnt that? and they're not using them STILL even with the subscription thing.. so you have to give them some credit in knowing HOW far to go and NOT going over the line.. so why not support them? 5 bucks isnt that much to pay..

    1. Re:Subscriptions by leviramsey · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Maybe subscribers should be able to see a list of advertisers, with a checkbox allowing them to change the policy from default to explicit allow or deny. The frequency with which allowed ads show up could be based on the relative chances of an ad from that advertiser showing up on an unsubscribed user's page (so if ThinkGeek appears on 10% of the pages of a non-subscribed user, then every tenth page-view where an ad would have been supressed has a ThinkGeek ad). Slashdot then gets the best of both worlds, and it's almost a moderation system for ads.

  2. One possibility by MadFarmAnimalz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I missed the forum thanks to work; there's one idea that had crossed my mind. I acknowledge that /. needs cash flow to keep moving, but there may be a way out of subscriptions.

    Set up polls to gather non-personal data for marketroids, such as what compiler you use and why, what http server you use and why, etc. I'm cerrtain that with some small measure of headscratching, it would be possible to gather information about the geek community to be worth money to a marketing research concern while at the same time keeping it within geek sensibilities, i.e. no 'what is your bank account number' type questions.

    Perhaaps some form of questionnaire to be filled out upon registration, retroactively applicable?

    Study us; we're geeks. We buy stuff. Expensive stuff. Servers. Networking gear. We're the bleeding edge consumers, what the marketing people call 'early adopters'.

    Just don't try to sell us beer.

    --
    Blearf. Blearf, I say.
  3. Well... by The-Bus · · Score: 5, Funny

    As long as I can hit the monkey and still get $20...

    --

    Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

  4. Avoiding Ads by ksw2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Never underestimate the willingness of computer folks to circumvent fees, no matter how small the fee is.

  5. Hasn't been asked enough.... by reaper20 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just in case I missed it:

    Do comments display ads by default?
    Do I get penalized for viewing them?
    And if so, am I paying for that?

    Can you explain all this again Taco? Just kidding.

    (ducks and runs)

  6. You know what? by neema · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Know what? I put that ad-removing code into my user space... read the IRC log and removed it. Specifically when I read this from Hemos:

    "Here's the reality: You block ads. You cost us money. Ultimately, I mean."

    This is where you have to stop and think "Hey... if Slashdot DOES go down because of a lack of profits, where will I turn?"

    Of course, there are other news places to go to. I visit The Register often. However, Slashdot is, despite any errors in editorials or anything... a truly unique news site. For the years I've been reading, I've been pleased overall. We've all encountered bumps in the road, and that bump in the road for users right now is the ads. Now, of course (which I find it ironic that this comes not long after this, but still) many of you are simply not going to go for the idea of something that was once pratically free and devoid of huge ads to have simply changed on you. You'll cheat the system as much as you can, and for the most part, you'll succeed.

    But how much will that accomplish? Realize the plight slashdot apparently is in, and how they need to raise money, somehow. Subscriptions and ads are that way. And while I disagree with a lot of the way they're going to implement them... why not just pick one way, even if you have qualms with it, and just go with it? Put aside your inflammatory, trolling and goatse links for a second and realize that Slashdot is truly a useful resource. If you're going to visit this site, for once prove that it doesn't take sneaky or unethical buisness for something to survive... merely a good product. That is what Slashdot is, and most of you know it: a very good product.

    While I personally won't be going for a subscription (16 years old = lack of credit card), I will stomach the ads and probably a lot more if they need it to survive.

    1. Re:You know what? by oGMo · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "Here's the reality: You block ads. You cost us money. Ultimately, I mean."

      This is complete BS, actually. Number one fallacy is a false dichotomy: either there are ads, or we make no money. Take a look at IGN. They are a partially-free, partially-pay site (although they're moving more toward for-pay), and I subscribe to them for $20 a year. And I'm happy to do it, because they have the kind of extra content for subscribers I'm willing to pay for (in addition to just supporting a site that I really like and frequent).

      This plan is complete BS. Assuming people will go for paying for not getting something is stupid. Paying for exclusion is stupid, because I can limit the signal myself, there's no service there. Supporting a site I like or not, I can't help but feel ripped off.

      Now if they moved slashdot to mostly-pay-for-stories, added some good original content, and did some bloody editing, I'd be happy to pay. I mean, slashdot is their only job, right? What exactly the heck do they do all day? Click a story and add a few halfway-literate comments without even checking? This is all fine and I have no complaints if I'm getting it for free. But if you want me to pay, shape up. That's all there is to it.

      --

      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage

  7. Copyright on posts by SiliconEntity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems like a good point by homerj at 16:41 in the chat. Posters give slashdot permission to publish their comments, but it's not a blanket grant. Slashdot can't put the comments in a book and sell the book, for example.

    By the same reasoning, wouldn't there be some limits on what slashdot can do to the site and still carry the implied permission by the author? Changing to a for-pay model means that slashdot is now profiting from the site in a way that was not the case when the author posted. Maybe he would not have been willing to use slashdot to publish if he had known that there was money coming in as a pay service, without getting a cut of that money himself.

    Seems to me that slashdot may be stepping over the line in charging for content which was submitted with the understanding that it would be published for no charge. Any lawyers care to comment?

  8. Pretty boring by Stonehead · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wonder whether CmdrTaco and Hemos really enjoyed the chat. Slashnet was overcrowded by trolls, there were lots of double questions about the ads and subscriptions and I think the Slashdot staff *does* have a mixed feeling on 'going non-free', but they can't go back. According to the logs, already 1,5% of the Slashdot visitors is a paying subscriber.
    I don't want to sound ungrateful for Slashdot, but some crew change might be welcome too. Slashdot has become a habit - the editors no longer feel obliged to fix half-wrong stories, they don't realize that they piss off a customer with every rejected submission and I think CmdrTaco has rejected *lots* of good ideas tonight. He seems to stick on only no-ads and gold stars, and little extra power for subscribers. Come on Taco, you aren't a suit - some things might not be too easy in Slash (submission of polls, access to the submission queue, a trusted net of paying moderators) but they will prove more robust and much cooler than this ripped-out-of-any-book business model. That's my point: Slashdot gets boring. I hate to see this leading weblog go the same road as so many others.. this is not another troll, Slashdot will be as interesting as it ever was, but the specialty is gone. Hey, we're a community! I liked the chat, but Taco hardly *listened* :( I wish him luck nevertheless.

  9. Hemos, Taco: You blew it. by Dan+Crash · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I just want to say two things:

    First, the notion that "posting is payment enough!" is a troll. Posting doesn't pay the bandwidth bills. I think it's sad that Slashdot has become a victim of its own popularity, but I understand their need to search out new sources of revenue. I'm not even against it.

    On the other hand: Sorry Hemos, Taco, but it doesn't sound like you put *any* thought into this subscription plan at all. (Proof: grep the IRC log for "i dunno", see how many times Taco says it.) Shouldn't you guys have thought this out before you implemented the thing? Isn't that the first rule of programming?

    And, not to be too pointed, but what about asking us what we want? For a site which prides itself on providing community, I'm profoundly disappointed in the way Slashdot rolled this out.

    You had a real chance to change the world here. What is Slashdot supposedly about? Open Source. Imagine if you'd practiced what we all preach: You could've let the Slashdot community propose and moderate the features they most wanted in a subscription service. Like Google, you could have shown all the failing dotcoms that, if you give the customer exactly what they want, you'll be successful where everyone else fails.

    You had a chance to lead the way, and you blew it. The current plan seems like -- forgive me - a Microsoft patch. Poorly thought out, badly implemented, causing more problems than it fixes.

    You could still do this right, you know. And I'll probably pay a few bucks because I know how much I've enjoyed reading Slashdot. But I can't help feeling like this is the beginning of the end. Here's hoping you pull this together, and thanks for the memories if it turns out you can't.

    --
    He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
  10. I won't subscribe! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    First I was afraid
    I was very sad
    Kept thinking I could never read
    a slashdot full of ads
    But I had oh so many posts
    Smacked down for saying jamie's wrong
    I grew strong
    I learned how to carry on..
    So now there's ads
    More of the same
    I just logged on to find them here
    Between the news and all the flames
    I should have changed my fucking hosts
    I should have switched my uid
    If I had known for just one second
    they'd be back to bother me

    So off I go - I'm out the door
    Just turn around now
    'Cause I'm not reading anymore
    Weren't you the one who hit me with $rtbl
    You think I'm quelled
    You think I'd just go to hell --
    Oh no, not I
    I won't subscribe
    As long as I know how to post
    I know I'll be alive
    I've got all my life to live
    I've got all my posts to give
    I won't subscribe
    I won't subscribe

    It took all the strength I had
    Not to read this thread
    Kept trying hard to ban
    slashdot addiction from my head
    And I spent oh so many nights
    Just posting crap at minus one
    Used to be fun ...
    But now I want to cut and run
    And you see me at
    Another site
    I'm not that stupid little user
    Reading every night
    And so you felt like dropping in
    And just expect me to be free
    Now I'm saving all my comments
    For someone who's loving me

    So off I go - I'm out the door
    Just turn around now
    'Cause I'm not reading anymore
    Weren't you the one who hit me with $rtbl
    You think I'm quelled
    You think I'd just go to hell --
    Oh no, not I
    I won't subscribe
    As long as I know how to post
    I know I'll be alive
    I've got all my life to live
    I've got all my posts to give
    I won't subscribe
    I won't subscribe

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  11. Re:It's a kind of intellectual arrogance. by Xerithane · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Absolutely agreed.

    The fact that they don't actually have a spreadsheet that they can reference to see revenue and costs is just silly. Yes, it ends in a .org -- but if it employs people (and /. does) you need to get your heads out of your ass and make a fucking business plan.

    I'll tell you how to avoid the entire /. ad/subscription mess - run it like a business instead of your after school project. Write a business plan. Do cost projects/analysis -- find out what websites make money. Hell, open up a merchandise store or do some serious bundling with thinkgeek. (More than what is there now)

    With how much readership (especially the types of readers) slashdot gets, it's really pathetic that there has not been a sound path to profitability. They have an entire web community rallying around them and they can't even figure out how much money it costs to run slashdot.

    And on a side note:
    I refuse to subscribe until I am not $rtbl'd and have an apology for receiving that treatment.

    --
    Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  12. Slashdot's new business model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    A guy walks into the public library one day... Okay, it isn't the public library anymore, they've been privatized for about a decade, but people still call it that. Anyway, the guy walks into the library, and the head librarian walks up to him.

    "Welcome to the Infotronobeam(r) Public Library! Our increasing costs means we have to look for new sources of income. Unfortunately the ad posters on the ends of the stacks aren't generating enough, and we have to seek financing from those who use our library."

    "Aw, damn," the man says. "You mean you're going to start charging me to borrow books? If you do, I'm just going to leave and go to some other library!"

    "No, no," the librarian says, smiling. "You still get as many books as you want for free."

    "Um, okay... So what exactly do I have to pay for?"

    "Nothing," she says, still smiling. "That is, unless you want me to stop doing... this! WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP!" She draws in a deep breath. "WOOP WOOP WOOP-"

    "Stop! Stop!" the man cries. "Okay, what do I have to do to make you not do... that?"

    "Oh, it's simple! You just pay five Northamericos, and you can check out a hundred books without any audio accompaniment. You can even choose if you only want certain kinds of books... For example, I could be silent in the Non-Fiction section, but shout WOOP when you go into the Childrens Literature section. It's like a tip jar!"

    "Okay... Wait. How is that like a tip jar?"

    "You're giving me a tip for my great service!"

    "The great service of not screaming incessantly?"

    "That's right! So, do you want to put some money in the tip jar?" the librarian asks, holding out the glass jar, shaking it as if in invitation. The few lonely Pentium pieces in the jar rattle. It seems not many have jumped at the opportunity.

    "No, I think I'll pass... I just want to check out books."

    The librarian gets a stern look on her face as she draws in her breath. "WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP WOOP..."

    At that point the man remembers he has some earplugs in his pocket. He puts them in his ears, and the woman's screaming dulls down to be almost unnoticeable. Smiling, he goes about looking for a book, with the librarian following, becoming increasingly frustrated. He notices suddenly that everyone else seems to be wearing earplugs as well... He laughs, thinking that the "tip jar" is going to remain pretty empty...

  13. Why I wont pay==Why Dot Coms failed. by rufusdufus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People who refuse to pay are not mainly in the group of people who begrudge the cost; probably most readers would gladly part with the money and are largely fairly well-to-do. Its the administrative overhead and risk that stops us.

    The 'overhead' refers to filling out forms, tracking the information, and the charges on my credit card. I hate paperwork. This alone is enough to make me leery of participating.

    The risk factor is the true stopper though.

    I won't give any personal information to anybody because I have been abused in too many ways; not just internet sites but the world at large. I have been sold on lists to telemarketers. I have been charged on my credit cards by fly-by-nights. I have been outright robbed using paypal. I have been spammed. I have had my personal computer cracked by warez hackers and chinese dissidents. I have been, and am being, stalked by a [literally] psychotic guy from New Jersey. I have had my bank account compromised; my credit card hijacked.

    In short, my life has been made a living hell by the simple fact that I have given information out to people who all said they wouldn't let it out.

    Thus I believe this is the 'ultimate' reason for the dot com failure; nobody ever solved the problem of easy, fast and trustworthy electronic transactions.

    Until that problem is solved, slashdot won't get my money.

  14. Karma Whores, only Better by Wanker · · Score: 5, Funny

    Remember the Karma Whores? People would compete to see who could come up with the most Karma points for the sheer joy of saying "my score is bigger than yours".

    I say let's ressurrect this annoying facet of human nature and turn it to Slashdot's advantage. Why not include a symbol along with each subscriber's comments that represents his/her "devotion" to Slashdot, as measured in US Dollars. (Kind of like the "community supporter" program on EZBoard, and similar "marks of recognition" found on other discussion boards.)

    The catch-- these are not earned, they're bought! People could mindlessly compete to see who could get the most impressive widget associated with their name. Hemos could spend hours thinking up new and more interesting associations.

    They would give no special privileges, just bragging rights (and revenue for OSDN).

    For example:
    $10 gets you "open source leech"
    $100 gets you "linux bigot"
    $1000 gets you "kernel hacker"
    $10000 gets you "alpha geek"
    $100000 gets you "better than Hemos"
    $1000000 gets you "new owner of Slashdot"

  15. Just read the entire IRC log... by FrozenFrog · · Score: 5, Interesting


    Some observations/questions which I found interesting (TI = Time Index):

    TI 15:12 - Someone asks about the costs of running Slashdot. Lots of "it's hard to tell", "hard to calculate", etc from the Slashdot crew. CmdrTaco says they have 12 servers + test boxes and stuff.

    TI 15:43 - Again someone asks how much is costs to keep /. going. And again we get "It's not that simple", "There's no easy answer", etc. Hemos mentions 30 servers. Hemos and Taco start throwing out numbers, and seem to agree that it's "about" $1.5 million per year.

    TI 16:14 - Someone asks if the money from subscriptions will go to help improve infrastructure, bandwidth, costs, etc. Hemos says the money will go into the OSDN bank account. He then says "But the money for Slashdot is tracked". Taco says "The thing is we don't need *more* we just need to keep what we have".

    TI 16:15 - A question is asked about how long /. can keep going at current funding levels, and what happens when the funding runs out. Taco says "I really don't know what happens", "If I were to *guess* I would say VA would sell Slashdot". Hemos says "Basically, VA has 18-24 months, OSDN is near cash flow positive".

    TI 17:16 - Someone asks how much bandwidth /. uses per day. Taco responds "12-20 megabits on the main box, probably half that on the images box", "we were spiking at like 35 (megabits) total".

    Is it just me, or does it seem profoundly odd to anyone that the people who run Slashdot have no idea how much money it costs? Maybe this is the reason they're in financial trouble? They say that /. is part of OSDN, fine. But in *my* company, I know how much money each separate *division* is costing me, and how much revenue it's bringing in. Isn't OSDN a real business with accountants that figure this stuff out and produce quarterly reports and all that other accounting stuff? And if you're a division/section head, like CmdrTaco and/or Hemos are, I find it very hard to believe they don't know how much money they're spending/taking in.

    Slashdot of course has absolutely no obligation to reveal their costs to their users, whether they're subscription based or not. But answering as they did above really makes them look unprofessional IMO. If they don't want to answer, or are prohibited from answering, they should simply state that.

    Personally, I won't pay for a subscription. I'll likely install JunkBuster or something similar. As someone posted on another thread, it's *my* right to choose what's displayed on *my* computer, and if I don't want to see ads, I won't. Just like it's the choice of Slashdot to remove itself as a freely accessible site and become completely closed and subscription only based if they want. If that happens, then I have a choice to pay, or not pay and get my news on the multitude of other tech news sites. It's all about choices, as it should be.

    So exactly how much DOES it cost to run Slashdot per year? :)

    Frog

    1. Re:Just read the entire IRC log... by Hemos · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Basically, we run the site. I don't run the company. I'm not the CFO - that's the person who tracks all of that data. I attempted to answer as best I could. If I had to say, 1.5 million is it.

      I also wanted to make my clear my statement about 18 - 24 months; that's current burn rate. That rate has been rapidly getting better - but please look at the filings with the SEC, and make your own judgement.

      --
      Yeah, I'm that guy.
  16. Re:It's a kind of intellectual arrogance. by Gaccm · · Score: 5, Interesting

    do you think they want to run this as a business? NO WAY. THEY ARE NOT IN THIS FOR THE MONEY BUT FOR THE FUN. The problem is that fun costs money, so they would like heavy slashdot users to donate (this system is MUCH more like a donation system than a subscription system, taco even says that in the article) to help them out. Is that too much to ask? or should they start being like Salon and all the other news sites where you have to pay for the good info? Please tell me which you would rather have.

    --

    Only dead fish swim with the stream...
  17. My favourite Taco comment.... by not_cub · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I joined the IRC channel, and read up to this point, when I left in disgust:
    A Score:5 comment, perhaps a few thousand.
    The value of comments is questionable.
    Considering the percentage of readers who care.

    Amazing... Slashdot is composed of two things, the front page, with all the spelling errors and factual mistakes, and the comments pages, with all the user submitted corrections. Now, if you take away the comments pages, you are left with the front page alone, and to me, slashdot becomes almost worthless. With the current levels of fact checking, I could never believe anything posted.

    The value of comments is questionable. If the value of comments is less than the cost of transmitting pages to people, then slashdot will ultimately fail, because it will throw money away with every page served. This is true whether the cost is paid by advertising or by paypal. However, the value of the frontpage alone, is a lot less than it is allied with the comments. The value of the frontpage is almost certainly less than the cost of transmitting it.

    Taco comments clearly indicate that he does not see this value. That he sees comments.pl, not as an integral and important part of slashdot, but as a burden on bandwidth and processing power. Wake up, Taco: you are not the only person with valuable content contributions to make to slashdot.

    As to hemos, he comes across as a guy seriously unable to do his job. If you've ever worked with one, you know what he mean. He does not seem to be contributing at all to helping slashdot stay afloat. He doesn't have any idea of what to do, or what direction to take. Taco seems to be carrying him.

    Good luck keeping slashdot going guys, but I doubt you are the people to keep it afloat. It will probably die when the .com cash runs out, maybe before if VA kills it first.

    not_cub

    --
    q='echo "q=$s$q$s;s=$b$s;b=$b$b;$q"';s=\';b=\\;echo "q=$s$q$s;s=$b$s;b=$b$b;$q"
  18. GENITAL GNAWING by waldoj · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm glad that an archive of this exists on slashnet.org -- I started logging the IRC session when I saw:

    <Questions> elsie asks: are these gonna be popout ads?
    <hemos> I WILL GNAW OFF MY OWN GENITALS FIRST

    Though I'm not looking forward to popup ads appearing here, I must say that I will enjoy calling Hemos on this one a couple of years down the line. :)

    -Waldo