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Salon, Nearly No Money and Ultramercials

Adam9 writes "As Salon fights for survival, they have introduced a new advertising program that allows you to receive a free 12 hour pass by clicking through about 10 seconds of advertisements. Currently, the advertisements are from Mercedes-Benz. According to the article, they've lost about $79.7 million from their start in 1995. They also have about 45,000 subscribers right now." Jamie also pointed out this article from the WSJ, as well as the words from Salon themselves about it.

439 comments

  1. Anyone know by digitalsushi · · Score: 3, Interesting

    how many subscribers there are to slashdot?

    --
    slashdot: where everyone yells sarcastic metaphors to themselves to understand the issue
    1. Re:Anyone know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Overheard from irc.slashnet.org:

      slyguy^: How many paying subscribers are there to Slashdot?
      Hemos: 12. After we split it all up, I got a #4 combo at Taco Bell. ;)

    2. Re:Anyone know by krow · · Score: 2

      Damn, dude got more then I did. I was hoping at least to get a seven layer burrito.

      --
      You can't grep a dead tree.
    3. Re:Anyone know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      12,308.

      The rest of the accounts are just duplicates because I couldn't remember my password. Like just now, so I posted as AC before setting off to make another account.

    4. Re:Anyone know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And what have those Slashdot subscribers really seen that makes it worth their money?

      What amazing new features have really come to fruition?

      It seems to me that the only 'slashdot update' on the subscription program was when they added the ability to take credit cards in addition to paypal. It isnt a very convincing argument for paying for slashdot when they arent offering anything for the payment.

      It is the same with non-paying customers really, but maybe they have less of a right to complain. Maybe.

      Slashdot has done nothing to improve its journalistic integrity, and the site itself hasn't seen any major technical improvements in a while. My opinion is the only people that *possibly* do their jobs at slashdot these days are the advertising guys and the admins who keep the site up and running.

      The editors do very little, and anyone working on slashnet hasn't shown me any results lately.

    5. Re:Anyone know by Sloppy · · Score: 5, Interesting
      And what have those Slashdot subscribers really seen that makes it worth their money?
      I'm a paying subscriber, so I can at least answer that question from one point of view.

      What I have seen is this: No ads, combined with the knowledge that Slashdot still got paid anyway (thereby staying open), every time I hit their server. I don't really care very much if any new features ever get added or not.

      That's all there is to it, and it's really that simple. I hate ads (and I fast-forward through them on my Tivo), and if I just filter, then someday Slashdot will cease to be (*). Without money, the wires that carry electricity and data would stop working, and then it would be over.

      That would matter to be, because I have fun here. I learn things, I read funny things that make me laugh, I troll, I egotistically shout nonsense just to hear my own voice, I watch others do the same, and we all waste time together. That's all I ask for, so it's ok if that's all I get.

      (*) How do I -- just one little guy using up half a cent credit with every page load -- possibly make that much difference? I don't know. If there are lots of people like me, then we'll add up to something. If there aren't many of us, then I hope someday maybe there will be. The basic principle is: if you want to change the world, you must first change yourself. Conduct yourself in the manner that you hope others conduct themselves. This is my strategy for keeping my playground open.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    6. Re:Anyone know by Com2Kid · · Score: 1
      • And what have those Slashdot subscribers really seen that makes it worth their money?


      • What amazing new features have really come to fruition?

        It seems to me that the only 'slashdot update' on the subscription program was when they added the ability to take credit cards in addition to paypal. It isnt a very convincing argument for paying for slashdot when they arent offering anything for the payment.

        It is the same with non-paying customers really, but maybe they have less of a right to complain. Maybe.

        Slashdot has done nothing to improve its journalistic integrity, and the site itself hasn't seen any major technical improvements in a while. My opinion is the only people that *possibly* do their jobs at slashdot these days are the advertising guys and the admins who keep the site up and running.


      Ok its a troll, but an irritating one. /. has added assloads of new features, friend/foe system is tweaked to hell constantly, the amiagos thing, the Karma system is being experimented with, aww screw it, just read CmdrTaco's journal.
  2. In other news... by mschoolbus · · Score: 1

    Salon is Still losing money...

    1. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      which is actually quite impressive, since most of the predictions that they would have died MONTHS (year ?) ago were wrong.

      i hope they never go down, it's the only source of NON megamedia-owned journalism there is on the web right now!

    2. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's the only source of NON megamedia-owned journalism there is on the web right now!

      Right. It's also the best source for institutionalized left-wing tripe.

    3. Re:In other news... by Usquebaugh · · Score: 2

      Try http://www.alternet.org or http://www.bbc.co.uk or http://www.michealmoore.com

    4. Re:In other news... by phippy · · Score: 1

      hmmm. could you suggest a source of very balanced impartial journalism ? or better, one that's not owned by a large megacorporation ?

    5. Re:In other news... by ichimunki · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, because indymedia.org, thenation.com, www.theregister.co.uk, www.politechbot.com, www.alternet.org are all just non-entities. Not to mention high-quality foreign journalism like the Guardian or the BBC.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    6. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's the only source of NON megamedia-owned journalism there is on the web right now!

      Oh really? How likely do you think it is that Salon will post a single story that is critical of Mercedes-Benz?

      I would trust their journalism a hell of a lot more if their bills were being paid by individual subscribers, NOT by megacorporations like Mercedes-Benz.

    7. Re:In other news... by phippy · · Score: 1

      of course....but it's not *OWNED* by a megacorporation, like AOL/TW or Microsoft.

      show me where there is an independently run online publication with a full staff and experienced journalists whose bills are being paid by individual subscribers, and i'll agree with you.

    8. Re:In other news... by xmedar · · Score: 5, Informative

      How about -

      Indymedia

      BBC

      or for some partial journalism / general questioning and sometimes odd, but certainaly not bland corp media

      Michael Moore

      DisInfo

      then there are specialist sites for different topics -

      Cryptome

      Statewatch

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced man is indistinguishable from God
    9. Re:In other news... by H310iSe · · Score: 1

      What's up with that anyway? I don't understand why these companies loose so much money. We ran an entire web business, streaming video, store, etc. on a yearly budget way under salon's daily operating costs. Meaning, I guess, that we could be open for the next 365 years on one year of salon's budget. OK so store and media content are not what Salon does, but I still don't understand WTF these people do that costs so much money...

      --
      closed minded is as closed minded does
    10. Re:In other news... by manofherb · · Score: 1

      how about these

      http://www.pitch.com

      it may be local, but it's independent and worth reading about even if you don't live there

    11. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      show me where there is an independently run online publication with a full staff and experienced journalists whose bills are being paid by individual subscribers, and i'll agree with you.

      Here.

    12. Re:In other news... by phippy · · Score: 1

      ah....i meant an online news/opinion magazine, not one with just product reviews.

  3. Most advertisers won't allow this... by NineNine · · Score: 4, Informative

    If they're getting paid per click, then generally advertisers don't pay for forced clicks, ie: I'm clicking this because I have to, not because I'm genuinely interested in their product. At least in the adult industry, this is a *big* no-no unless you accept a *much* smaller pay rate (generally called 'blind' clicks). I don't know how it'll fly with their advertisers.

    1. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by grahamsz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's clearly inline with their advertisers wishes.

      The advert i saw the other day from mercedes benz was clearly designed to be exactly that sort of click through. It had 4 pages of very flash oriented adverts for some new car.

      I must admit it was quite effective, and if i had the money to buy a mercedes then the ad might have effected me.

      If it were better targetted and perhaps extolled the benifits of red bull and coding sessions then i might have gone for it.

    2. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by SirSlud · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Which is exactly why CPC (cost per click) aint as popular as it used to be.

      CPM (cost per thousand) is the defacto standard.

      Furthurmore, most ads dont have anything to offer beyond the clickthru. Internet advertising is primarily a branding medium .. getting the customer to click thru isnt as important to the advertiser as youd like to think. (Although, granted, with aquisition campaigns, usually hybrid deals rear their ugly heads .. like CPM with a little Cost Per Action thrown in .. or sometimes its _just_ CPA.)

      Actually _seeing_ the ad for longer than 2 seconds is. (Salon isnt forcing you to click, they're forcing you to watch .. they force the impression out of you, which is actually _good_ for the advertiser.)

      I know these things because I write the ad delivery server for a company that has about 10% online penetration (one in ten americans online have 'hit' my ad server at some point.)

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    3. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by sporty · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why would they complain? We are forced to watch movie trailers and other commercials before a movie at risk of getting good seats. Heck, using AOL moviephone uses those stupid commercials.

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    4. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10% online penetration (one in ten americans online have 'hit' my ad server at some point.)

      I disagree with your definition of 'online penetration'.

    5. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Lizard_King · · Score: 5, Funny

      I know these things because I write the ad delivery server for a company that has about 10% online penetration (one in ten americans online have 'hit' my ad server at some point.)

      In those 1 in 10 Americans that have 'hit' your ad server, I'm sure that 9 of 10 would like to 'hit' something else.

      --
      "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." - Jack Nicholson
    6. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Sc00ter · · Score: 2
      this is 100% true, I used to work for an internet advertiser (i.e. banner ads) and that's what it was all about.. Best way to put it is how do you find out the click thru on a billboard?

    7. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I must admit it was quite effective, and if i had the money to buy a mercedes then the ad might have effected me.

      There's a reason you don't have the money to buy a Mercedes vehicle. Improper usage of the English language, it prevents you from landing a high paying job. The proper word to use in that sentence is "affected". Better luck next time.

    8. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by p_trinli · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      ...and if i had the money to buy a mercedes then the ad might have effected me.

      Might have affected you.

    9. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Just because most Net advertisers haven't grasped the fact that branding also applies to Net advertising. Most still want to pay per click. I agree, that branding also works on line, but most advertisers still don't pay for it.

    10. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by grahamsz · · Score: 2

      Improper usage of the English language, it prevents you from landing a high paying job

      Ahh i knew that anyway (or at least i did about 50ms after hitting post), I've been having a crappy day anyway. Typically that would be on the day that I had 4 hrs of aptitude testing for an investment bank IT job.... personally i think beer is the reason i dont have a high paying job.

      Thankfully we live in the age of the spell checker :)

    11. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by FunkSoulBrother · · Score: 1

      This makes sense. While I've never clicked on an X-10 Camera ad, I certainly know from the "billboard" effect what product they are selling. And if i was ever in the need for such a product, I'd probably at least look at them as an option.

    12. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe you made that pun and didn't even mention that he was talking about 10% penetration!

    13. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DISRUPTION OF THE POWER PROCESS IN MODERN SOCIETY
      59. We divide human drives into three groups: (1) those drives that can be satisfied with minimal effort; (2) those that can be satisfied but only at the cost of serious effort; (3) those that cannot be adequately satisfied no matter how much effort one makes. The power process is the process of satisfying the drives of the second group. The more drives there are in the third group, the more there is frustration, anger, eventually defeatism, depression, etc.

      60. In modern industrial society natural human drives tend to be pushed into the first and third groups, and the second group tends to consist increasingly of artificially created drives.

      61. In primitive societies, physical necessities generally fall into group 2: They can be obtained, but only at the cost of serious effort. But modern society tends to guaranty the physical necessities to everyone [9] in exchange for only minimal effort, hence physical needs are pushed into group 1. (There may be disagreement about whether the effort needed to hold a job is "minimal"; but usually, in lower- to middle-level jobs, whatever effort is required is merely that of obedience. You sit or stand where you are told to sit or stand and do what you are told to do in the way you are told to do it. Seldom do you have to exert yourself seriously, and in any case you have hardly any autonomy in work, so that the need for the power process is not well served.)

      62. Social needs, such as sex, love and status, often remain in group 2 in modern society, depending on the situation of the individual. [10] But, except for people who have a particularly strong drive for status, the effort required to fulfill the social drives is insufficient to satisfy adequately the need for the power process.

      63. So certain artificial needs have been created that fall into group 2, hence serve the need for the power process. Advertising and marketing techniques have been developed that make many people feel they need things that their grandparents never desired or even dreamed of. It requires serious effort to earn enough money to satisfy these artificial needs, hence they fall into group 2. (But see paragraphs 80-82.) Modern man must satisfy his need for the power process largely through pursuit of the artificial needs created by the advertising and marketing industry [11], and through surrogate activities.

    14. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The advert i saw the other day from mercedes benz was clearly designed to be exactly that sort of click through. It had 4 pages of very flash oriented adverts for some new car.

      I must admit it was quite effective, and if i had the money to buy a mercedes then the ad might have effected me.

      And that's exactly the point. Advertising in 'traditional' media (TV, magazines, billboards etc.) isn't designed to make you rush out and buy the product straight away. It's designed to create brand awareness. Brand awareness is very powerful. I'm sure most male Slashdot readers don't use female moisturiser. But I bet most could name at least one brand of female moisturiser. That's brand awareness for you.

      When advertising was applied to the Internet, this all seemed to get lost somewhere. Faced with a way of accurately gauging the immediate response to an advert, people began to devise charging systems based on those metrics (for example, click-throughs or, increasingly, actual sales). Can you imagine if TV stations were only paid a fee for each viewer that immediately bought an advertiser's product? I think that most networks would go under pretty quickly.

      I believe Internet advertising has great potential. Users can interact with adverts, replay them, instantly get more information. They can be much more engaging and useful than adverts in traditional media. But people have to stop thinking in terms of click-throughs and sales and look at the long term influence. Just because Joe user doesn't instantly click on an ad, it doesn't mean that it hasn't had an effect on him. And it's really criminal than some advertisers don't pay sites unless their ads get an immediate response; it's a very narrow-minded attitude that needs to be updated. An obvious measurement of user reaction isn't always the best one.

    15. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but what if you're using Privoxy or something similar? I don't see any advertising. What then?

    16. Re:Most advertisers won't allow this... by muyuubyou · · Score: 1

      The bottom line of all this is that what people need is product information rather than mesmerizing "smiley faces"-"strange music" propaganda. This would lead to an ultracompetitive market corporates don't want because their profit margin would get lower and lower.

      When I get my bandwidth capped not only my time and my nerve is at stake with every downloaded add. My money is too. That would definitely put a price to ad-free contents.

      BTW, it's just me who finds that acronym crap annoying? CPC for me means "Amstrad CPC" and CPM is CP/M.

  4. I have the solution! by craenor · · Score: 3, Funny

    Tasteful banner ads for online porn! Afterall, it's still the online money making king.

  5. They don't know how to make business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't know how to proceed. They have a huge team and they have setup a big company, FOR WHAT?
    This is a news site, and it should only have 1-3 people writting articles and reporting on things, and maybe one more person taking care of the advertisement, promotion and stuff like that.

    I know sites of that size (serving around 100,000 pages views per day on average), that are only registered as LLCs and they make about $5-$6,000 per month from the ads. It is not much money, but at least they don't have to pay huge teams and function as a corporation.

    1. Re:They don't know how to make business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      BTW, Salon.com ranks No 714 on Alexa.com, which means that they serve more than 2-3 million pages per day. That should make them around $50,000 per month from ads. More than enough to pay a small team of journalists.

    2. Re:They don't know how to make business by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Yeah, but don't forget their business model:
      1. Start up
      2. Get lots of subscribers
      3. Sell out or IPO
      Like in poker, they held a bad hand too long, and now they're dead. Big deal.
    3. Re:They don't know how to make business by tmark · · Score: 4, Interesting

      600K a year would not come close to covering the cost of the high-profile and high-quality writers and editors they have on board. Then don't forget their production staff, sales staff, marketing staff, tech people, legal counsel, bandwidth costs, associated overhead, etc., etc.,

    4. Re:They don't know how to make business by Mr.+Bad+Example · · Score: 1

      In other words....

      1. Start an online magazine
      2. ?
      3. Profit!

      (Yeah, yeah, I know...)

    5. Re:They don't know how to make business by John+Miles · · Score: 2

      Sheesh, you'd think they actually had to buy truckloads of dead trees and run printing presses for a living, or something.

      My sympathy for Salon is pretty limited. Requiring me to sit through a Mercedes-Benz ad in order to read the Bush-bash du jour seems like a pretty broken business model.

      --
      Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
    6. Re:They don't know how to make business by kawika · · Score: 2

      The math isn't hard, either. Start with 50K/mo. Hosting and bandwidth is probably $15K/mo. Office space and other expenses are maybe $15K/mo, although they may have committed to a budget-busting lease a few years before. If each person averages $5K/mo (60K/yr in salary+benefits, commission, or frelance) and there is $20K/mo left, they can pay for FOUR people.

      Think I'm too high on hosting? OK, take it down $5K and you can add another person. Office space too expensive? Okay, knock $5K off there too and add another person. Now you have six people. Maybe you can convince people to work for $4K/mo on average, pay the freelancers less, or chop out benefits, that could get you to a staff of seven or eight.

      Play with the numbers all you want, it's not fun because eventually you realize what all the big pubs know, in an content production organization your big expense is people costs. You reduce costs with layoffs or freelance cutbacks, which leads to less content and lower quality due to poor editing, which leads to disgruntled readers. Repeat until death spiral ends.

    7. Re:They don't know how to make business by nulleffect · · Score: 1

      BTW, ./ is #1328 on Alexa. Salon is more popular than ./, at least in terms of traffic.

  6. Micropayments by gengee · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If Salon has decided to take this route, why not allow micropayments? I don't have a subscription to Salon, because I don't read it very often. But I do sometimes find 'premium' stories I'd like to read...Just not enough to get a subscription. If I could pay 25 cents or whatever to read the story, I gladly would.

    I realize there are problems with accepting micropayments via credit card, but certainly something like PayPal could be used.

    --
    - James
    1. Re:Micropayments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      a company called Liquify is trying to sell that to companies.

    2. Re:Micropayments by jhines0042 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Micropayments could work this way: You initally deposit $25 into your account and then you micropay... when your $25 gets low, you are automatically charged (on your credit card) for an additional $25.

      There are toll roads that operate this way.

      --
      42 - So long and thanks for all the fish.
    3. Re:Micropayments by beq · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unfortunately, PayPal charges a minimum of 0.7% + $0.30, and that rate requires use of a Paypal debit card. The problem with micropayments continues to be that it's hard to make money off such small transactions until there are millions of them. I still have fond memories of "First Virtual". They were one of the first online payment services, and they aimed squarely at micropayments. Unfortunately there wasn't enough money in it, and they went under.

      A working micropayment system would solve a lot of problems in a lot of industries.

      --
      -Brendan
    4. Re:Micropayments by beq · · Score: 2, Funny

      FWIW, That's exactly how First Virtual worked. Geez, do I feel old.

      "When I was your age we had to carry our packets with our bare hands to the router...It was 5 miles, in the snow, uphill!*cough*"

      --
      -Brendan
    5. Re:Micropayments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, because of the fees Paypal assesses, any paypal "payment" of less than $1 goes entirely to Paypal. So $0.25 micropayments are really not well suited to paypal.

    6. Re:Micropayments by p_trinli · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Micropayments could work this way: You initally deposit $25 into your account and then you micropay... when your $25 gets low, you are automatically charged (on your credit card) for an additional $25.

      However, this defeats what micropayments try to solve in the first place: paying for just what you want, like an individual story on Salon.

    7. Re:Micropayments by shario · · Score: 1
      One problem with credit card payments is that they force you to enter your personal data on a form. This scares people off, even though they would otherwise be happy to pay for the service.

      If there were a feasible micropayment service, it could help with this, but I haven't seen any service that would be widely enough accepted.

    8. Re:Micropayments by dubl-u · · Score: 2
      Micropayments could work this way: You initally deposit $25 into your account and then you micropay... when your $25 gets low, you are automatically charged (on your credit card) for an additional $25.
      However, this defeats what micropayments try to solve in the first place: paying for just what you want, like an individual story on Salon.

      The theory works pretty well for long-distance phone cards, eh?

      Heck, maybe that's the solution. Maybe I should just do a micropayment system based on charging to long-distance phone cards. Available everywhere, anonymous, and trusted. Anybody know how phone card settlement works?
    9. Re:Micropayments by Mac+Degger · · Score: 2

      Micropayments are most definitely usefull in the wired world. It makes me wonder why VISA or Mastercard don't start up an online service...either only accesible to cardholders (bad idea, but at least it gives a certain guaranteed payment) or to subscribers through their own creditcard, with a $5 yearly cost for using the service.

      There's certainly a market for it for the credible company who makes it there first.

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
    10. Re:Micropayments by p_trinli · · Score: 1

      Good point. Adding micropayments onto an existing billing system--say, your Blockbuster account for downloading online media--is a good idea. This would likely avoid extra taxes and the need to sign up for yet another company. I don't know about the rest of you, but adding yet another website to those I use that requires a password is a pain.

  7. maybe... by Steveftoth · · Score: 1

    they should pay the writers less?

    Or get the writers to produce stuff that is worth paying for. It's a hard road, but someone has to want to read the stuff they write.

    It's kinda to problem with the internet, since the barrier to entry is so low, you get the stuff that couldn't be published anywhere else because the barrier to entry was higher.

    1. Re:maybe... by Skyshadow · · Score: 2
      Or get the writers to produce stuff that is worth paying for. It's a hard road, but someone has to want to read the stuff they write.

      That'd be interesting -- set up contracts so the writers get paid based on how many people read their pages or, better yet, click on ads in their articles.

      I could see a whole new writing paradigm evolving, one where you have Suck-style links to products you mention in your article and other tomfoolery to try and get people to go spend money.

      Of course, it's way too late for Salon to adopt this approach -- the only time they'll be bringing in money is when they auction off their office equipment.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    2. Re:maybe... by spindizzy · · Score: 1

      That would be great if all you want to produce is populist drivel - we already have a market for that, it's the mainstream media.

      If you were being ironic it certainly didn't show.

      --
      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur
  8. wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IBM and ORACLE suits listen to blink 182?

    I agree people who read salon are left wing nuts, but its also obvious that you are a moron who pretends he knows what hes talking about.

    1. Re:wow by belverus · · Score: 0

      Actually that moron is right, Anonymous Coward. Next time log in - Be proud when you call someone a moron and stop hiding.

  9. Is this where things are going? by beq · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's an interesting idea, a "temporary subscription" in return for viewing some advertising. It seems there's something for everyone. The advertiser gets a forum where people actually have to click through the ad; Salon gets some money from the advertiser; and non-subscribers get access to "premium" content. If this works (and Salon stays in business in part because of this), perhaps other content sites will follow suit.

    --
    -Brendan
    1. Re:Is this where things are going? by grahamsz · · Score: 2

      Salon is a quality site, with the sort of quality journalism that can probably command fairly good advertisers and their money. (as can be seen by the calibre of ads on their site).

      Their site plainly appeals to more educated and probably more wealthy individuals and i am of the opinion that this advertising method will not work for many other sites.

  10. Re:almost by SirSlud · · Score: 2

    You forgot about the rational, successful, zitless, oversexed posters who time and time again try and post something like the following with a straight face:

    "You are all geeks. I am the lone non-geek who has a real handle on life in a way none of you ever possibly could .. mostly as evidenced by you posting to same site I'm posting to. I have you all figured out. Now I need coffee."

    --
    "Old man yells at systemd"
  11. Too bad, but seemingly unavoidable by Skyshadow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's too bad to see Salon go -- they have genuinely interesting features on occassion. That said, I don't see how they ever really planned on surviving once the dot-com meltdown occurred. Selling the ability to opt-out of annoying ads just didn't cut it, especially given their level of overhead (big-name writers and the like). If Suck couldn't keep its head above water, Salon was always doomed. Still, it'll suck to have the only real webzine be Slate.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    1. Re:Too bad, but seemingly unavoidable by AlexCV · · Score: 1

      In addition to no ads, you also get access to a lot of content. I find that I get my 30$ worth.

      Alex

  12. How did they lose $80 million? by djembe2k · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Look, I love Salon, and I'll really hate to see them go if it comes to that. But I don't see how they accumulated a debt of $80,000,000. They aren't in retail, so it isn't inventory. They didn't have to do years of unprofitable R&D to develop some sort of magical intellectual property that would pay off later. They are a web site. What am I missing?

    Now they have a solid base of advertisers and 45,000 paying subscribers, which is really good for an online magazine. The WSJ article says they are looking at a strategy of reducing costs. Sounds like a plan to me. Is it really conceivable that they can't find a way to keep costs within expected revenues?

    1. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by indiigo · · Score: 5, Informative

      http://www.salon.com/ir/data/

      Amazing what about 10 seconds of searching, a "financial" link, and a browser, will provide you.

      --
      fslg503-985-8686503-985-8686503-985-8686503-985-86 8650 3-985-fdsg8686503-985-8686503-985-8686503-9
    2. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by wiredog · · Score: 4, Informative

      Over 7 years. They are more than a web site, they are an online magazine. With a staff, and reporters, that need to be paid. Also, they have hardware costs to consider. They probably upgrade the servers, routers, etc every two to three years. Federal, State, and local taxes. Rent for the offices.

    3. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They produce the content of a weekly magazine every day. This is why they lose so much money. Even terrific magazines with 100s of 1000s of subscribers like the New Yorker lose money, I don't see why Salon would expect to profit.

    4. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by sporty · · Score: 2

      Hrm... rent, salaries, bandwidth, renting the office.. all big debt accumulators if you ask me.

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    5. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 4, Informative

      They are a web site. What am I missing?

      It's the fact that web sites have to have content.

      And Salon has a LOT of unique content, meaning writers and editors who all deserve to get paid.

    6. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Didion+Sprague · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My question -- similar to yours, I think is this -- do deadtree magazines rack up similar debt?

      In other words, is the absence of paper -- and a physical object -- less profitable than if you do what Salon is doing and go 100% electronic?

      I seem to remember that Slate.com tried the deadtree thing -- along with their website -- and I remember that the Slate magazine was available in Starbucks. I actually *liked* the magazine -- as opposed to the annoying site (with its reader letters back and forth -- which strike me as the absolute height of pomposity and "in-joke-ness". If you just try to browse Slate, you're hit with all these things referencing other things -- and if you don't know what the "Fray" is and if you haven't been following all the oh-so-elegantly written missives between experts, you're lost. Salon *isn't* this way -- thank god. So I'm digressing, but everytime I think of Salon, I think of Slate and how annoying it is. Michael Kinsley is (was?) bad enough, but now that he's departed, the whiff of pomposity is still there.)

      Anyway, I know Salon at one time had some pretty good writers writing for it. I was always fond of Camille Paglia's stuff. But apparently they shit-canned her and a bunch of other writers a year (two years?) ago. Hasn't been the same since.

    7. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Mignon · · Score: 5, Funny
      I actually *liked* the magazine -- as opposed to the annoying site (with its reader letters back and forth -- which strike me as the absolute height of pomposity and "in-joke-ness". If you just try to browse Slate, you're hit with all these things referencing other things -- and if you don't know what the "Fray" is and if you haven't been following all the oh-so-elegantly written missives between experts, you're lost.

      That (hot grits) sounds (goatse) familiar (beowulf). Where (karma whore) have (first post!) I (Natalie Portman) seen (/. effect) that (anonymous coward) before? (troll)

    8. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's nice, too bad it takes 2 hours to wade through the quarterly reports, doublespeak, and doctered numbers.

      Can anyone make basic sense of this?

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
    9. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Gumber · · Score: 2

      Not to mention that a lot of web sites burned through far more than $80million with a lot less to show for it.

    10. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by ilmdba · · Score: 2, Informative

      looking at their balance sheets, they've lost approx. $55 million over the last three years.

      this is broken out into 'production, content, and product', 'sales and marketing', and 'general administrative'.

      my guess is most of the cash went into employees' pockets, and advertising/marketing campaigns.

      how much you think the top dogs at salon were making back in the good ole days?

      i bet there's a good number of people at salon who've raked in salaries in the $ millions over the last few years there.

    11. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That (hot grits) sounds (goatse) familiar (beowulf). Where (karma whore) have (first post!) I (Natalie Portman) seen (/. effect) that (anonymous coward) before? (troll)

      Don't (???) know (profit!)

    12. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I know full well how publishers (and other online enterprises) can lose so much money.

      Back in 1997 I started a little website at 7am.com.

      It wasn't pretentious and simply sought to become a news aggregation site designed to save people time by bringing together links to the most interesting stories from all around the Web.

      About this time I'd also just finished co-writing a book on Java (being a programmer from way-back) and it occured to me that I could syndicate my regularly updated list of headlines and links using Java-based news ticker.

      Thus an empire was born!

      Within a few short months, 7am.com had gone from getting just a few hundred hits a day, to getting half a million or so.

      The News Ticker was a smart idea -- it allowed people to include regularly updated, topical information on their web-pages at no cost or effort.

      Within a few short years there were over 200,000 third-party web-pages carrying the 7am.com news ticker and it was being hit around 2 million times per day.

      By that time I'd also started publishing a "newswire" consisting of stories written by myself and a small group of other writers who were keen to get some experience in the (then) new and exciting world of online journalism.

      Probably not a lot of people are aware, but 7am.com was (to the best of my knowledge) the very first website in the world to carry the pictures sent back from the surface of Mars by the Pathfinder mission in 1997. 7am.com beat NASA, CNN and all the other sites I checked by several minutes and -- thanks to the News Ticker's ability to "get the message out" to a heap of other sites, there were over 100K visitors within the first half hour of those images being posted.

      The exact details of how this "scoop" was achieved is revealed in an upcoming book I'm writing.

      7am.com also scooped most of the traditional media when NATO launched its attacks on Serb targets in Yugoslavia. One of our newshounds lived near an airport from which the B-52's were despatched and he filed a report within a minute or so of the first wave taking off.

      The same thing happened in 1998 when the US and Britain attacked Iraq -- 7am.com got the news up first.

      7am.com got the full Starr Report on Clinton's "misbehavior" online before many of the other news sites -- but we were smart enough to ZIP up our copy so that people could download it more quickly.

      Our ability to scoop big (and small) stories like this, combined with the viral growth of our news ticker meant that 7am.com was ranked by NetRatings (now Neilsen/Net Ratings) as being more popular than Playboy.com, The BBC's news website, and right up there alongside FoxNews.

      So why have I typed all this stuff?

      Well here's the bottom line...

      Until mid 1999, 7am.com was doing all this on a monthly budget of around US$7,000.

      That's right -- the total cost of running what was, at the time, the world's most widely syndicated web-based news service, was just $84,000 a year. What's more -- there were months when revenues almost covered those costs so the actual operating loss was significantly less.

      How was this achieved?

      Simple -- 7am.com was a true "virtual newsroom" which took full advantage of the power the Net offers to slash overheads.

      Although the webservers were located in San Diego, California, the "head office" of 7am.com was a tiny home-office in the New Zealand countryside, 10,000 miles away.

      Total staff consisted of myself and two or three other part-time freelancers.

      No Porsches in the carpark (no carpark!), no flash offices, no boozy lunches, no scooters in the hallway -- just a small group of people working their asses off and breaking some important new ground.

      I have to admit that I worked 18 hours a day for four years without a single day off. In fact, I got an ear infection and had the rather unpleasant experience of my eardrum bursting because I was too busy to get to the doctor in time -- but hey, it's only pain eh?

      About that time a group of VCs came along and said "we can take this business to the US and make a fortune". They promptly bought a majority stake in the business and set about "preparing it for sale".

      Now remember, this was a business that had run very successfully on a shoestring budget for nearly four years and had built the largest syndication network of its type on the Net.

      It had a very successful structure and operating model -- hell, it was even gearing up to make a profit!

      Unfortunately, things changed dramatically once the VCs got their hands on the controls.

      Suddenly the total outgoings jumped from $7K per month to nearer $120K per month. Offices were hired, staff recruited, new computers purchased, etc, etc, etc.

      Suddenly seven figure sums were being consumed -- and, what's worse, the carefully crafted, and very successful publishing systems which had been put in place were being overhauled (ie: screwed around with) despite my objections.

      To cut a long story short (buy the book if you want details ;-), the money-hungry VCs effectively bloated the operational costs by a huge sum.

      Phrases such as "you've got to spend money to make money" and "image is important" were bandied about freely.

      I was told that nobody would be interested in investing in, or buying 7am.com if it didn't have "substance". The "virtual" concept had to be replaced by lots of people huddled in little cubicles it seemed.

      My suggestions that surely profit was more important than "image" fell on deaf ears (perhaps I was once again ahead of my time eh? :-)

      The VCs ended up totally screwing the sale of the company, I got so frustrated I resigned, and now 7am.com continues to "chug along" but seems to have totally lost the spark, innovation and cutting-edge attitude that won it such success when the money-barons weren't in control.

      By the way, I *am* serious about the book. There are literally thousands of "my secrets to success" type of books written by figureheads of business such as Richard Branson, Victor Kiam, etc -- mine has the working title "The secrets of failure".

      I may not know what to do right in the world of business, but I sure have a very long list of things I've done wrong. Hopefully people will buy the book and learn from *my* mistakes rather than their own.

      Let's face it, I must have screwed up real bad to come out of the dot-com boom with nothing but pocket change eh?

    13. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the posters point was that you can basically take control of the entire compnay with 1 million dollars. Check the mkt cap on basdaq

      http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=SALNC&d=t

    14. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by zogger · · Score: 2

      --hey! Used to use your ticker, great freebie man. thank you.And your headlines were topnotch, quick as anyone's, great stuff. Sorry to see ya lose it. Next time don't sell out to the VC's, just figure out how to do it so it don't take 18 hour days..it's funny too when I was using yor stuff I was doing 18 hrs on a site and daily newsletter, for about zilch money, just doing it. Oh well....

    15. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Mac+Degger · · Score: 2

      That's over 11 million a year. That's still pretty expensive for an operation which needs an office, computers, internet access and people; no special equipment or extraordinary expenses (sure, airfare costs, but not that much). If I do it real ballpark expensive, it's a million for realestate; a million, lets say two, for equipment; about the same combined for personel (2.5m). That's 5 million combined, so all you need now is your travel, bribe and other miscelanious expenses. That's 6 million...I know people who could start very succesfull companies from a sixth of that.

      Sure, they're .bomb, but when the bubble burst they must've come across the notion of making a company profiatble after three years, or at the most 5?

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
    16. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by billstewart · · Score: 2

      It looks like NTK is out of their "I got £80million in venture capital for my .com idea and all I have left is this lousy t-shirt" T-shirts by now.

      --

      Bill Stewart
      New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    17. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by dubl-u · · Score: 2

      Let's face it, I must have screwed up real bad to come out of the dot-com boom with nothing but pocket change eh?

      Living in San Francisco, my base assumption is that anybody who got rich during the boom did it by a) cynically cashing out, b) spewing bullshit, or c) screwing their colleagues as soon as they got the chance.

      That's not true of everybody, of course. Some of the people who made bank were smart, honest, and worked their asses off. But the fact that you built a major website, tried selling out, and ended up with lint mainly tells me that you were honest, sincerely believed in what you did, and were too nice when negotiating with sharks.

    18. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "They are a web site. What am I missing?"

      Yeah, they just get some guys to sit down and type. All you need is a few computers and a net connection. I don't understand all that stuff about insurance, research etc. If SlashDot gets 30,000 hits a day, why can't salon get hits and turn them into money. Somehow?

    19. Re:How did they lose $80 million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on.

      You could pay a chimpanzee 5 bananas per day, give him a computer, and end up with better copy than the socialist drivel that Salon produces.

      The world will be a better place when they liquidate and sell their domain name to a gay porn company.

      Oh wait, they already have gay porn. Nevermind.

  13. Dying. by grub · · Score: 0, Troll


    [To paraphrase the *BSD is dying trolls]

    It is official; Netcraft now confirms: Salon.com is dying

    One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered Salon.com community when IDC confirmed that Salon.com market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent. Coming close on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that Salon.com has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. Salon.com is collapsing in complete disarray.

    You don't need to be a Kreskin to predict Salon.com's future. The hand writing is on the wall: Salon.com faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for Salon.com because Salon.com is dying. Things are looking very bad for Salon.com. As many of us are already aware, Salon.com continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.

    Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.

    All major surveys show that Salon.com has steadily declined in market share. Salon.com is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If Salon.com is to survive at all it will be among dilettante dabblers. Salon.com continues to decay. Nothing short of a cockeyed miracle could save Salon.com from its fate at this point in time. For all practical purposes, Salon.com is dead.


    Fact: Salon.com is dying

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  14. They have no chance in hell by MSBob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Salon must be incredibly expensive to run. They employ full time journos and lots of support staff and techies. If a place like Kuro5hin.org (literally a one man show) barely hangs on through fundraisers and pledge drives then Salon with their scores of employees and meager advertising income are going down the tubes quickly.

    --
    Your pizza just the way you ought to have it.
    1. Re:They have no chance in hell by wiredog · · Score: 2

      Yeah. That's what people have been saying since 1995. 7 years ago. But Salon keeps hanging on.

  15. You should subscribe ... by Greedo · · Score: 2

    .. if for no other reason than to see the Spock pr0n.

    --
    Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
  16. Maybe They Just Suck by MBslug · · Score: 0

    I still get Salon on my handheld thru Avantgo but I have to say, only about 3% of the articles really hit the mark. The rest are really offensive. In general, I wouldn't ascribe Salon's failure as a failure in the business model, but the content. I didn't see any Slashdot articles on the demise of Rosie's magazine.

    --
    The more you scare people, the more they will pay you
  17. what you're missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    what you're missing is that it takes money to run a magazine... *real* journalists, *real* reporters, etc.

    it took USA Today 5 YEARS to become profitable, and it was still only because they were bought out by a huge megamedia company.

    1. Re:what you're missing by the_other_one · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They really went about it the wrong way. For example: There's this one geek news site that seems to be successful winthout any real journalists, real reporters, or even real editors.

      --
      134340: I am not a number. I am a free planet!
    2. Re:what you're missing by nicedream · · Score: 1

      ...and without any real content either (they link to other peoples' original content).

      Someone's gotta have original content somehwere. Not every site can be just a "cool link" site like /.

    3. Re:what you're missing by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      And does slashdot make money?

      Besides, slashdot exists parasitically. If everyone went the slashdot route, there'd be a vast sucking sound as they all went out of business.

    4. Re:what you're missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that vast sucking sound you here is your girlfriend under my desk.

    5. Re:what you're missing by haa...jesus+christ · · Score: 1

      and usa today wasn't supposed to be profitable for several years longer than that.

    6. Re:what you're missing by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 1
      And does slashdot make money?

      Yes.

      Although I can't find a decent reference at the moment, except for a snippet from the back cover of a book roblimo wrote about making profitable websites.

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
    7. Re:what you're missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You call THIS a news site ??

      They havent had an original idea in years and lately all it has been is todays bash MS story which the average reader could care less about. Linked content and whiny attempts at cool smart arse comments on MS arent news...

    8. Re:what you're missing by cjsnell · · Score: 2


      They could have saved money in other ways. Why the office in San Francisco? Could they have not officed in, say, a small strip mall office in Lubbock TX and conducted the publisher/reporter/journalist interactions via e-mail and telephone? Being located in SFO really racks up the bills--everything is more expensive out there.

      With regards to your USA Today comment--no wonder it took them so long to be profitable. Have you seen their office building in Northern VA?

      These dot.commers really need to get it out of their heads that they don't need an SFBA/LA/NYC/BOS/NOVA office to succeed.

    9. Re:what you're missing by dubl-u · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're missing the point.

      Slashdot works fine when somebody is already writing about the topic of interest and is willing to give their material away for "free" (meaning free or with ads).

      Salon (and every other decent magazine) pays people to write new material. Sure, they have stuff from an AP feed, but I can get an AP feed anywhere. What I'm buying with my subscription to Salon (or, say, The Economist) is that new material.

      That material costs money to produce and more money to edit. That money has to get to the writers and editors somehow. How would you suggest?

    10. Re:what you're missing by dubl-u · · Score: 2

      They could have saved money in other ways. Why the office in San Francisco? Could they have not officed in, say, a small strip mall office in Lubbock TX and conducted the publisher/reporter/journalist interactions via e-mail and telephone? Being located in SFO really racks up the bills--everything is more expensive out there.

      Hey, that's a great idea! Perhaps you should call up the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times and let them in on the secret. And now that you mention it, maybe you could get one of the movie studios to move to Wymore, Nebraska. I hear they only have one traffic light, so commutes should be much easier.

      Personally, I doubt it would work. Smart creative people like to live in interesting places. They like to live near other smart, creative people. And they like to live in places where there are lots of companies who will hire them. If they're going to move somewhere for work, every journalist I know would rather move to Uzbekistan than Lubbock.

      Note that at least two of the tech centers (SFO, BOS) grew up around major research universities. That's no accident.


      With regards to your USA Today comment--no wonder it took them so long to be profitable. Have you seen their office building in Northern VA?


      Their building had relatively little to do with it. Any new major magazine faces a long climb to profitability. The problem is much worse for a daily. It's the standard bootstrapping problem: until you reach a certain level of quality, you can't get the subscribers. But you can't afford to reach the level of quality until you get them.

    11. Re:what you're missing by daviddennis · · Score: 2

      USA Today was never bought out. It was a crusade by the then-head of Gannett, and has always been owned by them. Not that this is frightfully relevent for what you're saying, but I don't like to see incorrect information spread.

      The other responder to your message is correct - people like living in San Francisco, despite the costs. More to the point, the VCs who financed them were in San Francisco, and they no doubt wanted to keep tabs on their investment.

      Finally, the rich liberals who were willing to bail them out all came from San Fransicso.

      I don't think they could have raised nearly as much money anywhere else.

      D

  18. Why I cancelled my subscription by Chairboy · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was a paying member of Salon for a year. The main way I read Salon was through my PDA using Avantgo. Salon's method for prompting users to get premium subscriptions was by giving a 1 page teaser of a premium article, then saying they should become paying members to read the rest.

    Their avantgo channel, however, had no method in place for Premium subscribers to get full stories on their PDAs! For a year, the premium stories would have their little teaser, then at the bottom there would be a little apology to the effect of 'Sorry, we haven't made a channel for our premium subscribers yet, but we will soon!'

    Empty promises.

    They never made the channel, and since my primary interface to Salon was via PDA, I wasn't getting what I had paid for (premium access).

    Their business decision to indefinately postpone the premium channels have probably cost them quite a handful of customers, which is unfortunate.

    1. Re:Why I cancelled my subscription by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a job for iSilo. Sweet little piece of software, IMO.

    2. Re:Why I cancelled my subscription by 5KVGhost · · Score: 2

      I second that. I read Salon on my PDA almost every day at lunch. I bought a subscription, and soon thereafter they dropped the stories from AvantGo. That was just plain stupid. They should've bitten the bullet and left the premium content available until they had a solution in place; it's not as though millions of potential subscribers would've flocked to an AvantGo channel just to grab a handful of premium articles each day.

  19. Well, duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Salon.com... I mean, come on, now. Who really thought that giving haircuts and facials over the internet was a good idea?

    1. Re:Well, duh! by tmark · · Score: 5, Funny

      Who really thought that giving ... facials over the internet was a good idea?

      I don't know about the rest of you, but I would think any company that could figure out how to give facials over the Internet would make a ton of money. I'd like to see a copy of THAT business plan !

    2. Re:Well, duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no facials on the internet? clearly you don't view much pr0n.

    3. Re:Well, duh! by DJCouchyCouch · · Score: 1

      > I'd like to see a copy of THAT business plan ! It would be quite soggy. DJCC

    4. Re:Well, duh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I would think any company that could figure out how to give facials over the Internet would make a ton of money. I'd like to see a copy of THAT business plan
      Actually the main business would be websites ready and willing to receive facials over the Internet.

      Go ahead and mod me down, I'm so going to hell anyway.

  20. Kind of like Slashdot by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to the article, they've lost about $79.7 million from their start in 1995.

    During which time VA Software lost $725 million.

    1. Re:Kind of like Slashdot by Deagol · · Score: 3, Funny
      How does CmdrTaco sleep at night??!

      On a big, cushy, VC-funded bed, I'm sure. ;-)

    2. Re:Kind of like Slashdot by protohiro1 · · Score: 1

      When I think of how much money was just BURNED during the bubble...it makes me want to vomit. Now, anyone with a job is lucky to have one. Computer science grads are getting offered unpaid work, or sub-$30k salaries. Goddamn the bubble.

      --
      Sig removed because it was obnoxious
    3. Re:Kind of like Slashdot by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 2

      Yeah, now it seems to be even worse than before the bubble. At least pre-bubble I had a job at Hewlett Packard (I'm a Comp Sci grad). Now the NJ R&D site for HP is no more.

  21. Ultramercials by crumbz · · Score: 3, Funny

    Man, that sounds scary. Like something from Brazil or Blade Runner. Might make your head explode if you watch for thirty seconds or more. I guess that's why Salon limited it to 10 seconds. Too much liability.

    1. Re:Ultramercials by k3v0 · · Score: 1

      it seems like they never watched max headroom.

    2. Re:Ultramercials by buckeyeguy · · Score: 2
      ===
      Might make your head explode if you watch for thirty seconds or more.
      ===

      That would be the blipverts from the Max Headroom series... or a half-hour of the Anna Nicole Show. Either one will fragment your noggin; take your pick.

      --
      I'd have a personalized plate on my car, but "toxic bachelor" won't fit into 7 letters.
  22. Goodbye.. by pcs305 · · Score: 0, Troll

    and good riddance. Salon was just waste of good bandwith.

  23. saying salon is dying is SO last year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    people have saying that Salon is dying since early 2001. if they have been dying, then how do they have so many people giving them money ?

    if it is dead, then why are its reporters/journalists continually being quoted in traditional magazines and newspapers ?

    i think Salon is one of the best reads on the web this year, and although things do look grim, they have been looking grim for the past 2 years, yet they still exist, defying gravity. good for them.

  24. Terra-Lycos might buy Salon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    There are rumors that Terra-Lycos (TRLY) is talking with Salon management to buy Salon. Well, it is only a rumor, but feaseable when Terra-Lycos has more cash than any other portal/dot.com o whatever.

    Is it time to buy .dot crashes with potential?

    1. Re:Terra-Lycos might buy Salon by kisrael · · Score: 2

      There are rumors that Terra-Lycos (TRLY) is talking with Salon management to buy Salon. Well, it is only a rumor, but feaseable when Terra-Lycos has more cash than any other portal/dot.com o whatever.

      Huh. Just had some friends laid off from Lycos.

      They got Lycos *and* got lost.

      I just wish there were, like, really rich people who were willing to fund interesting stuff like word.com or suck.com, kind of like that heiress lady giving $100million to a Poetry magazine.

      I mean, guess if they had always thought that way they wouldn't have their bajillions, but now that they do, it would be cool if they could fund worthy online ventures.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    2. Re:Terra-Lycos might buy Salon by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 2
      I just wish there were, like, really rich people who were willing to fund interesting stuff like word.com or suck.com . . .

      Amen. From Salon's article on their own troubles in the internet economy:

      Let us observe a moment of silence for the likes of Suck, Hotwired, Feed, Word and APBNews.com, all of which got out the electric cables, yelled "Clear" and zapped the flat-lining carcass of American journalism. They are gone, but will be remembered long after the likes of In Style, Us, Maxim and the era's other newsstand hood ornaments.


      I still go back and read old suck.com articles when its a slow news day on /.. Salon isn't quite a replacement, especially now that they've stopped running Camile Paglia's column.
      --
      if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
    3. Re:Terra-Lycos might buy Salon by jacquesm · · Score: 2

      Terra Lycos & Tiscali too are always talking to everybody... talk is cheap however.

  25. I was like that for a while by sydlexic · · Score: 2

    but then I started to really pay attention to the content and actively mine the past articles. they have some really good and thought-provoking stuff. it really is unlike a lot of the more traditional news sources like new york times and washington post. there are articles on the left and right equally. as an independent, I found it refreshing enough to subscribe. and now I spend a lot more time reading material that I don't seem to find anywhere else.

    1. Re:I was like that for a while by macshit · · Score: 2

      Yeah, salon has some really great stuff -- but they also have huge quantities of crap, and the ratio of good/bad seems much worse than for similar print magazines.

      Because of this, I think a micro-payment scheme would be really attractive for readers -- but for the same reason, it might be very bad for salon, if people only payed for 5% of the content!

      --
      We live, as we dream -- alone....
  26. Too Liberal by N8F8 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think there are many reasons Salon is failing: too much overhead, lack of a print version, content too stagnant for the medium(NET). But the real nail in the coffin is their far-left reporting/editorial. The Fray is great, but if you are going to post a bunch of baseless rhetoric to get readers fired up you had better have a convenient method for opposing views to reply. Otherwise you wind up with former readers like me, who don't like to be beaten-up with our arms tied behind our backs. Disagreeing with many of the articles drove me to read the site, but in the end it also drove me away. Slate is a similar site, but the forum is much more accessible and tied to the content and the authors/guest writers and columnists seem to actually read the forum posts.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:Too Liberal by Aexia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But the real nail in the coffin is their far-left reporting/editorial.

      Because god knows there aren't any outlets for conservatives anywhere else in the media.

    2. Re:Too Liberal by cruachan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Far left? Jeez. To me Salon - British - sounds distinctly 'soft right' - i.e. it's view would fit on the middle to left wing of out Tory (right wing) party.

      You have no idea what leftwing really is!

    3. Re:Too Liberal by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      I think there are many reasons Salon is failing: too much overhead, lack of a print version, content too stagnant for the medium(NET). But the real nail in the coffin is their far-left reporting/editorial. The Fray is great, but if you are going to post a bunch of baseless rhetoric to get readers fired up you had better have a convenient method for opposing views to reply.

      You are exactly right, that's the main reason I stopped reading Salon just after they launched their subscription programme. I enjoy exposure to ideas that are in conflict with my own, but only if as you say there is an avenue for real debate and opposing views to be put. When they started to run into financial problems, I thought huh, maybe the Democrats can bail you out, 'cos I sure as hell won't be subsidizing you to attack my beliefs.

    4. Re:Too Liberal by ceswiedler · · Score: 2

      I agree. I hate overly-biased political writing. I tend to refuse to believe anything which sounds extremist, unless I hear and disagree with an intelligent argument from the other side. I'm pretty liberal, but there's only so much W.-bashing that I can stand before I want to hear something from the conservatives, too.

      However, I'm a subscriber to both Salon and Slashdot, and I get my money's worth from them. I'll be sad to see either one go. (Hint, hint: will you be sad, too? Would it be worth a few dollars to you?)

    5. Re:Too Liberal by hondo77 · · Score: 2

      You raise an interesting point. Where's the /.-like community at Salon? Slate has feedback but it's about as useful as Yahoo's boards for commenting on stories (no moderation == too many idiots). Then again, all those posts would probably mean more hardware/support costs. I don't know about a left vs. right slant in Salon (I just became a Green so I'm above it all now :-) but it is interesting reading, IMHO.

      It's all probably moot, though. While their revenue is increasing I don't see how they're going to erase all that debt.

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    6. Re:Too Liberal by taxman_10m · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I don't think that is what was meant. Leftism just doesn't sell as good on the web. If you look at successful news/opinion type sites, they are conservative. Even if you look at the best seller list for books, conservatism is doing really well.

      Anne Coulter actually had a hard time getting her book Slander published, and yet her book became an immediate best seller. Somewhere there is a serious disconnect with marketing people and what they think sells.

    7. Re:Too Liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because god knows there aren't any outlets for conservatives anywhere else in the media.
      >>>>>

      Wait, you count Fox as media? Even I, a conservative, don't count them as a news station ... They're more like the 6 o'clock sensationalism channel :)

    8. Re:Too Liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right on! Another liberal rag bites the dust! I hear MSNBC is on the rocks too.

    9. Re:Too Liberal by aftk2 · · Score: 1

      Bah. You think this is only affects conservative books? "Stupid White Men" became an immediate best seller, and Michael Moore went through hell to publish it.

      Regarding web sales...lets take a look at Moore's book's sales rank on Amazon.com. Wow! 24th! And it was first published in February. (Slander was published in June, and is at 148.)

      All this only underscores the final point you made, however: there is a serious disconnect with marketing people and what they think sells.

      --
      concrete5: a cms made for marketing, but strong enough for geeks.
    10. Re:Too Liberal by superyooser · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Besides some AM radio talk shows, George Will's column, and a few web sites, what are you talking about? I guess you weren't kidding when you said [only] God knows. Even if you consider Fox News "conservative media" that's a single island in an worldwide ocean of liberal media.

      On the liberal side you have ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNN, the Associated Press (AP), PBS & NPR (taxpayer subsidized), and that doesn't include non-US based international and localized media.

    11. Re:Too Liberal by Keith+Russell · · Score: 2
      Where's the /.-like community at Salon?

      Funny you should ask that. Scott Rosenberg addressed that issue in his blog today.

      I don't know about a left vs. right slant in Salon...

      Left. Waaaay left. Salon slants so far left, they've toppled over.

      Rosenberg is one of the reasons I haven't deleted Salon's bookmark yet. He's one of the last of a dying breed there: The rational liberal. I think they're trying to troll their way back to health. The rhetoric has become increasingly shrill and occasionally paranoid. And I don't know what medication Joe Conason is on, but he really needs to have his dosage adjusted. Salon claims to be the last bastion of intelligent journalism, but yet they stoop to pushing the same hot buttons as the screaming heads that pass for commentators on MSNBC. You all know the type. They believe that the entire political spectrum can be represented by one bit: 1 for Liberal, 0 for Conservative.

      It's a shame, really. Outside the realm of politics, they actually live up to their billing. I particularly like the sports columnists, Allen Barra, King Kaufman, and Keith Olbermann. But I can't support them with a subscription without also endorsing the horribly skewed politics of their editors. So, they don't get my money. Apparently, they don't get anyone's money.

      --
      This sig intentionally left blank.
    12. Re:Too Liberal by kableh · · Score: 2

      And now that Bush has pushed through his absurd "Homeland Security" bill, don't you feel that some of that Dubya-bashing was jusitfied?

      Frankly, I liked Salon a lot, though I found some of their writers to be ridiculously left. However, with the bigger stories they always seemed to have multiple writers with opposing viewpoints writing about the same subject. I found Salon to be mostly objective.

      And I make it a point to read some conservative sites too, if only to remind me why I need the hell out of this godforsaken country.

    13. Re:Too Liberal by rodgerd · · Score: 3, Insightful
      far-left reporting/editorial


      You should try sticking your head out in the world beyond the US political track. Far left my arse.

      Or perhaps reading the magazine. With such noted raving lefties like Andrew Sullivan as columnists...
    14. Re:Too Liberal by KingJawa · · Score: 2

      While I agree it's more liberal than not (understatement), that's not the real issue. Instead, it's the Howard Stern Postulate: You have to have people who read (listen to) you because they hate you, too.

      And people who disagree aren't going to pay $1, let alone $20.

    15. Re:Too Liberal by angst_ridden_hipster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Far left? *Far*?

      Good God, has the spectrum in the US moved that far to the right?

      Salon may be left/center, but I don't recall seeing any articles demanding redistribution of land in the US or violently returning the means of production to the proletariat. Far left is Revolution, my friend, where you don't publish people like David Horowitz, you string them up in the city square.

      Far left? Jesus F Christ...

      --
      Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachtani?
      www.fogbound.net
    16. Re:Too Liberal by timeOday · · Score: 2
      But the real nail in the coffin is their far-left reporting/editorial.
      Because god knows there aren't any outlets for conservatives anywhere else in the media.
      So you're saying driving away customers won't hurt Salon.com, because there are plenty of other places for the customers to go? And apparently the folks who modded you up thought that made sense.
    17. Re:Too Liberal by metachimp · · Score: 1

      Well, if you want some pro-Bush reporting, you can always check out NewsMax, or National Review Online. Salon is definitely left of center. Socialist? Perhaps, but considering that I've never met a so-called "conservative" who could actually give a definition of socialism other than "it's what the democrats want, and it's really bad."

      I'm sick and tired of liberals being brow-beaten into agreeing with the conservatives simply because conservatives start screaming about Clinton and blow jobs and 'liberal media bias', and are made to apologize for not wanting to turn the country into a brutal theocracy based on 'merit' and the thoroughly debunked supply-side economics...

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
    18. Re:Too Liberal by ctr2sprt · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Ah, I see. Bias in reporting is perfectly acceptable, as long as you can go find bias in the other direction from a different source.

      Sometimes you read the news to be agreed with; sometimes you read the news to argue. But sometimes you just want to be informed, with a minimum of bias. Salon drove me away because its writers seemed to have a lot of difficulty dealing with that third case. I think that's what the complaint is here.

    19. Re:Too Liberal by mhackarbie · · Score: 1
      I've been both a Salon and Slashdot reader for a while now and I just subscribed to Salon because I very much want them to survive. I also encourage all Slashdot readers to support Salon because some very disturbing changes are taking place in our political system. For the first time, there is no judicial oversight of the government for secret search and surveillance of the U.S. public. Even if you believe that our freedoms must be compromised for the sake of security, the danger comes when these new investigative powers are abused and used against people for reasons other than the war on terrorism.

      The only way for us to become aware of such abuses is to have a strong alternative to the mainstream media. So I would urge all slashdotters, even those who are usually apathetic to political issues, to invest some time and energy in political awareness and support for independent journalism. Otherwise, someday you may find yourself at the wrong end of a law enforcement process gone out of control.

      mhack

      --
      Building a better ribosome since 1997
    20. Re:Too Liberal by Aexia · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The mainstream media which has been kissing Bush's ass for the past 3 years after spending 8 years trying to tear down Clinton and 2 years tearing into Gore is LIBERAL? What do you think a "conservative media" would look like?

      AM radio talk shows

      Quick, name three nationally syndicated left-wing AM radio talk show hosts!

      ABC, CBS, NBC

      I suppose you could argue that a couple anchors are "left-wing".

      The weekly policy shows are dominated by conservatives. ie: This Week, Meet the Press. Featured guests and "Experts" tend to be conservative more often than not.

      MSNBC, CNN

      Both of which are dominated by right-wing hosts.

      PBS & NPR

      Haven't been watching lately, have you? Again, the policy & news shows are predominantly conservative or business centric.

      Newspapers? The vast majority(60-40) endorsed Bush in 2000.

      I've noticed that convservatives seem to think anything that's not heavily tilted to the right is "left-wing."

    21. Re:Too Liberal by Foamy · · Score: 1

      Funny, that's exactly the reason I *paid* for my subscription. I want to read good stories from a liberal POV.

      If I wanted to read a bunch of GOP masturbatory fluff, I would read FauxNews.com....or any of the many right-leaning sites.

      I think the Democrats showed in the most recent round of elections that if you walk like a Republican, and talk like a Republican, then don't expect Democrats to vote for you. Likewise, if Salon acts like it is neutral, or moderate, then expect to lose my $$$.

    22. Re:Too Liberal by Silverhammer · · Score: 2

      Blockquoth the poster:

      Regarding web sales...lets take a look at Moore's book's sales rank on Amazon.com. Wow! 24th! And it was first published in February. (Slander was published in June, and is at 148.)

      Never mind the fact that Amazon is promoting the hell out of Moore's book right now, in conjunction with his recently released movie...

      (...2, 3, 4...)

      If you want your point to stick, I suggest you compare apples to apples and look up what Coulter's ranking was at the height of her summer book tour.

    23. Re:Too Liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      has the spectrum in the US moved that far to the right?

      I wish! Really, it's more of a pseudo-right: socialists deisguised as conservatives. Take Dubya for example: he's basically a far-left communist who wants to expand federal government and remove states' rights, get government involved in everyone's life, and increase the national debt. But since he's a member of the Republican party, and Americans want to believe there is a right party and a left party, he gets called a "conservative."

      From what I can tell, most of my fellow Americans are basically communists. Nobody seems to realize: USSR won the cold war.

    24. Re:Too Liberal by e40 · · Score: 2

      Reality warp detected. Yes, PBS/NPR has a left leaning. All the others you mentioned are far from lefty.

      Have you ever watched CNN????? Cripes, it appears to me that all you have to do to get a show on that network is say you're a conservative.

    25. Re:Too Liberal by JDAustin · · Score: 1

      Quick, name three nationally syndicated left-wing AM radio talk show hosts! Left-Wing AM Talk show hosts dont last because they are constantly challenged on there views and are unable to defend them. People dont listen to fluff on AM radio, which is what the left-wing talk shows are. I suppose you could argue that a couple anchors are "left-wing". The weekly policy shows are dominated by conservatives. ie: This Week, Meet the Press. Featured guests and "Experts" tend to be conservative more often than not. Couple of Anchors? With the exception of George Will who is a conservative and John Stossel who is borderline Libertarian, who is conservative? Did any anchors go to Republican fundraisers like Dan Rather did Democratic? As to the Weekly policy shows, This Week is hosted by George Stephanopoulos . This is the guy who came from the Clinton White House. MSNBC, CNN Both of which are dominated by right-wing hosts. Since when did Aaron Brown, Larry King, Phil Donahue and Connie Chung become Right-Wing? PBS & NPR Haven't been watching lately, have you? Again, the policy & news shows are predominantly conservative or business centric. Wasn't Bill Moher (a PBS host) in the news recently for basically stating George W. is an idiot and the US is becomeing more facist? (or something to that extent) Damn, sound predominently conservative to me. Ask most liberals what they think of FOX and they say its conservative. Ask Conservatives and the will say it's moderate. Fox is well balanced w/ O'Reily (who is a Populist, not conservative), Hannity and Colmes (1 liberal, 1 conservative there), Geraldo (face it, he is a liberal, just a fair minded one), etc. Face it. The media is liberal and has been for quite some time. There is nothing wrong with the media being Liberal, just as long as there fair, which they have not beem. Hence the reason Fox does better then CNN now.

    26. Re:Too Liberal by weaselgrrl · · Score: 1

      So true. The US has lost any notion of what left wing politics are. Today a centrist in the US is call a liberal leftist.

      --
      I spent all of those years as Anonymous Coward and all I got was this lousy number (204976).
    27. Re:Too Liberal by Mnemia · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't even mind some bias in what I read; hell, Slashdot is very biased (though I happen to agree with most (but not all!) of /.'s leanings...). But Salon went way too far with it. Many of their articles just seemed like flamebait to me, arguing for the sake of promoting the writer's ideology to the exclusion of all logic or sense.

      Maybe I'd like Salon more if I were a serious far-lefter, but I'm pretty moderate on most issues. And for that reason I prefer to get my news in a way that is at least somewhat impartial. I mean, I want to be able to still seperate factual content from the writer's bias when I'm reading between the lines, and Salon just makes that difficult because the bias is so extreme. I used to read Salon a lot but it got to the point where I felt like most of the articles contained at least one blatent lie. That was too much and I quit visiting.

    28. Re:Too Liberal by dubl-u · · Score: 2

      Frankly, I liked Salon a lot, though I found some of their writers to be ridiculously left. However, with the bigger stories they always seemed to have multiple writers with opposing viewpoints writing about the same subject. I found Salon to be mostly objective.

      Agreed! Overall, I'd say that Salon has a very lefty viewpoint, but relatively little lefty bias. Americans seem easily confused about the difference. Thus the slop you see in most newspapers, where "objective" means asking a person on either side of the story and printing their comments withought thought or analysis.

    29. Re:Too Liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Bah. You think this is only affects conservative books? "Stupid White Men" became an immediate best seller, and Michael Moore went through hell to publish it [salon.com]."

      -Note for the future:
      Using a left-wing website as a reference to why the left-wing media is allegedly 'harsh' on left-wing writers/filmmakers is only something that someone with the disconnect of left-winger would do

      Ewwww...I feel dirty now saying 'left-wing' so much...I'll have to use commie from now on...

    30. Re:Too Liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " So true. The US has lost any notion of what left wing politics are "

      yes, they don't know it's basically communism...
      but at least europe in on track..i look forward to the stories of the starving euro masses...good luck comrades...pffhhttt

    31. Re:Too Liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm sick and tired of liberals being brow-beaten into agreeing with the conservatives simply because conservatives start screaming about Clinton and blow jobs and 'liberal media bias', "

      -YEAH!! ME TOO!!

      Oh, wait...They still don't agree...they use funerals as political platforms and denounce reality even louder than before...nevermind

      "and are made to apologize for not wanting to turn the country into a brutal theocracy based on 'merit' and the thoroughly debunked supply-side economics... "

      Ah, i see...capitalism has been "thoroughly debunked"...right... Is this another example of liberal's being brow beaten???

      Newflash, commie...Reality is knockn on your door... WAKE THE FUCK UP

  27. Maybe their approach is the problem? by VT_hawkeye · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Sheesh, in their letter to subscribers, it appears to me that they'd rather blame President Bush and the Republicans for their struggles (and for everything else too) than actually address the problem (not enough readers are interested in paying for ultra-highbrow, leftist rants cleverly disguised as intellectualism).

    Do they use that excuse in their SEC filings too?

    1. Re:Maybe their approach is the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Well, Bush and the Republicans are OUT TO LUNCH with their fiscal policy.

      Let's see.. take a balanced budget, give the top richest 1% a huge tax break, then let's give billions of dollars of corporate welfare to Lockheed Martin, GE, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, etc...

      Then when the economy tanks and the little guy, from whom we collect the REAL tax money from, can't make any money anymore, and thus can't spend, the deficit will get even bigger, forcing the next administration to raise taxes to make up for our irresponsible spending.

    2. Re:Maybe their approach is the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey the new department of homeland security bill lifts the ban on the government doing business with companies that move their corporate headquarters over seas to avoid taxes.

      I love how they snuck all these breaks and handouts for large corporations into the homeland security bill.

      There's more corporate handouts in that bill than there is security.

      Ya republicans favor small government, that's why they just created the hugest government bueracracy in 50 years!

      At least i can sleep at night know the DoHS will be opening a file on each and every american. Before you actually had to be suspicious like play chess in russia or be a professor of middle eastern studies, now they stopped this unfair discrimination and open a file on everyone! woohoo!

    3. Re:Maybe their approach is the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It shouldn't surprise us that these liberals have the same mindset as Palestinians:
      Don't try to understand the real reasons for your failure; instead, blame all your problems on Jews and supporters of Israel (conservative Republicans, in this case).
  28. I tried it two weeks ago by mao+che+minh · · Score: 5, Informative

    I used this little feature about two weeks ago. I wanted to read the rest of one their "premium" articles that I really wanted to see the conclusion of. I just happened to actually read one of the ad's that claimed that I could get a free pass to read this article if only I would look at this $60,000 BMW or something. I agreed. After about 10 seconds an ad with about 10 frames generated. By the time I got to the third or fourth frame, I noticed that I didn't have to click through all of the images. In the lower corner, in very fine print, was a "skip to article" button or something. It worked.

    1. Re:I tried it two weeks ago by adb · · Score: 2

      Special. I sat through the whole ad and then, at the end, I got to go to the page that told me to look at the ad again.

      Me not read Salon. Them too lame. Me blog instead.

    2. Re:I tried it two weeks ago by sircrown · · Score: 1

      Did you see the note that says cookies must be enabled? If you do have them enabled then maybe your browser is just plain broken.

    3. Re:I tried it two weeks ago by adb · · Score: 2

      Meh. Watch me not care at all about solving this problem. Blogs are free and don't make me jump through hoops.

  29. Come on Slashdotters ! by tmark · · Score: 1, Redundant

    I'm holding my breath waiting for the first post to detail how we can circumvent their super-advertisements. I'm guessing the odds are about even that we see a post before I turn blue.

    1. Re:Come on Slashdotters ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at the post above yours and exhale ...

  30. Why they failed... by Cap'n+Canuck · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't have a special insight into the on-line publcation industry, but it seems to me that there are a lot of Toms, Dicks, and Harrys blogging lately. Maybe these are ex-Salon writers, but blogs allow for an interaction between soapbox ranter and listener. Even with a 'Letter to the Editor' space, a publication is still one sided. "Here's my point of view - suck on it!". And, as we all know (as is the case with blogs and OS's), you just can't compete against something that's free...

    From reading comments in here, I get the feeling that Salon's material is below par. It should come as no surprise that Salon is dead, but I'm amazed that they have lost as much money as they have. I wonder what they pay (paid) their writers?

  31. 45,000 is small beans. Analagy to cable subscript. by Frobozz0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd like to state that I worked for a company that had over 180,000 "subscribers" before it folded in 2001. We didn't charge for a subscription, but we did charge for content. Each piece of content you viewed was a small fee. Quite frankly, I was never convinced of this business worthiness of this approach. We burnt through about 30 million before going belly up. Looks like Salon will be doing the same thing.

    I think online communities are going to have a hard time selling to individuals. While the metaphore works for real world newspapers and magazines, their publishing numbers are going down. Less people are reading them because they can get free content on the web. Now, I totally believe you should pay for content, but it should be subscription based and not be on a per site basis. In a sense, it should work like AOL (I know, I know). With AOL, you get prepackaged content. I'm suggesting you pay xx.xx dollars and get a pass to 20 or 30 web sites that all use the same password. You should be able to sign up for these sites through different subscribers, like you would your domain registration or cable access. The web sites still get the same amount of money, but if one 'net-network can provide a lower price but sell to more people, they can compete. They could also provide different site packages or offer more sites.

    --
    "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
  32. dear salon, by happystink · · Score: 3, Informative

    You ran for 5 or 6 years by giving away 100% of your content and lost an assload of money :( . Then you started only giving away 80% and lost less money :) . But you have still lost 80 million dollars :(

    Right now, you should immediately switch and give away only 20% or less of your content and charge for the rest. Maybe you will still go out of business, but if you don't do this you are guaranteed to, running crazy ad deals for mercedes is not even close to a long term solution :( . And maybe you'll actually turn your business around, if that is still even a remote possibility :()

    --

    sig:
    See the "..for smart people" banners Wired runs here? Look elsewhere guys.

    1. Re:dear salon, by KillboyPHD · · Score: 1

      Right now, you should immediately switch and give away only 20% or less of your content and charge for the rest.

      The problem with that is that, then, no one but subscribers would read the content. In order to get people to want to subscribe, you have to let them "taste" what it is they'll be spending their money on.

      One way to do this would be micropayments, but until that's ready, the 10 second commercial pass fits the bill.

      --
      Bah weep granah, weep ninny bong!
    2. Re:dear salon, by happystink · · Score: 2

      That's why I said 20% though, I agree with you in theory (except about micropayments), but I think giving away 80% of the stuff is too high a number.

      --

      sig:
      See the "..for smart people" banners Wired runs here? Look elsewhere guys.

  33. Re:45,000 is small beans. Analagy to cable subscri by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I'm suggesting you pay xx.xx dollars and get a pass to 20 or 30 web sites that all use the same password.

    Kind of like Adult Check. Qpass tried this but I'm not sure they're still around. Spring Street Networks offers personals this way but I suppose it could be connected to content sites as well ...

  34. Don't care! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't mind free subscriptions like the NY Times and I don't even mind a few trade mags that give me a subscription in exchange for some personal information. But, I won't use the pay services. When I read something on a free site, my expectations are low and I take it all with a grain of salt. When I pay for something, I have higher expectations. Salon and others just don't provide content that I'm willing to pay for. Even if all pay site went away I'd be just fine. I was doing just fine before they came along and I'll be fine if they all blow away.

  35. Random Premium Content Rant by gelfling · · Score: 2

    A BIIIIG problem w/ Salon is that the Premium (fee) content categories change from day to day. Everyday the list of columnists that are "Premium" change and what you could read for free yesterday.

    My favs are the cartoons (Carol Lay is a God(dess))

    Carry Tennis

    Andrew Sullivan.

    1. Re:Random Premium Content Rant by epcostello · · Score: 1

      You get what you paid for.

  36. Like the old Warez sites... by autopr0n · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Anyone remember those old warez sites, (and some H/P/A sites as well) where they tried to force you to click their sponsors, or links to top-sites in order to access them?

    I guess all kinds of marketing comes around. But the real question is, are people too cheap to pay for salon premium really going to buy Mercedes-Benzs?

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Like the old Warez sites... by DJCouchyCouch · · Score: 1

      Warez sites? What's that? :P DJCC

  37. I Love Salon... by httpamphibio.us · · Score: 2

    ...and there is no way I'd ever pay for any subscription to anything (even in print) ever again.

    The freeness of information on the net has forever tainted my opinion on things worth subscribing to, as it as done to many others. Eventually, this will lead to a ton of small sites that exist based on the owners love of whatever that site is about. The quality won't be the same, but I'll be damned if I'm paying a penny for any of that anymore.

    --
    sig.
    1. Re:I Love Salon... by PylonHead · · Score: 1

      The quality won't be the same, but I'll be damned if I'm paying a penny for any of that anymore.

      After all, who cares about the quality of information. Who cares if the information is researched and fact checked.

      God forbid we actually pay people to do work for us.

      In fact the freedom of information on the internet has inspired me to stop paying for things entirely. I'm hoping that I can find someone to supply my house with electricity based on their love for supplying people with power.

      It's time for lunch. I'm going to go find someone who would love to make me a hamburger.

      --
      # (/.);;
      - : float -> float -> float =
  38. Thank God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally the thinly disguised Communist web magazine, Salon, can be shut down. This is capitalism at work. Adios Commies, and as a good GL'er would say, "Good Luck!"

    1. Re:Thank God by cruachan · · Score: 1

      Communist? I don't think so. Vaguely soft-right if anything.

      Try this - www.socialistalliance.net/ - for a real socialist party

    2. Re:Thank God by random_nick · · Score: 1

      Mr. AC, You obviously have no the slightest idea about Communism. There are not too many places where you can have first-hand experience anymore, but you still could catch up on the topic by reading about the subject before you talk. Being stupid does not make you a big time capitalist pig, brother.

      --
      Even random is random. My nick, too.
    3. Re:Thank God by superyooser · · Score: 1
      Soft right?

      A quick browse of Salon turns up articles on Bush bashing, GOP bashing, business bashing, ultra-sick rap (Eminem), grunge (Kurt Cobain), witchcraft, and actual pornography! It may not be Communist, but it certainly isn't right-wing.

      Besides, no right-wing news site would have an entire Sex section. Sorry, the Starr Report doesn't count. :-)

    4. Re:Thank God by cruachan · · Score: 2

      The instances you mention are why I said "soft" right. In european political terms Salon is at best "centre-right". It's is most definatly not left wing - not by any wild stretch of the imagination.

      A UK example will illustrate. The "soft right" of our conservative (right wing) party a week or two ago defied conservative party policy and voted for a bill to allow adoption of children by gay couples.

      There's an old joke commonly trawled up when teaching US politics to British students. Runs something like this. "America has two main political parties. On one side there's the Republican party, which is roughly the equivalent of our Conservative party, and on the other side there's the Democratic party, which is roughly the equivalent of our... Conservative party"

    5. Re:Thank God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Mr. AC, You obviously have no the slightest idea about Communism."
      -yeah, with communism,they would have starved,not be shut down

      " There are not too many places where you can have first-hand experience anymore, but you still could catch up on the topic by reading about the subject before you talk."
      -Not too many places cause they all STARVED? perhaps...yeah...read a book

      " Being stupid does not make you a big time capitalist pig, brother. "

      -but it helps if you're into communism...

    6. Re:Thank God by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well gee...euro-trash are socialist/communist.... well...who fuckn knew....

  39. Oh my -- it's bad by Chagrin · · Score: 2

    It's gotten so bad for Salon they've started giving away their content management system!

    --

    I/O Error G-17: Aborting Installation

    1. Re:Oh my -- it's bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      as in: oh my, RedHat allows you to DOWNLOAD it's version of linux for free!

      bricolage is *opensourced* which is a good thing.

    2. Re:Oh my -- it's bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      humorless cretin

  40. let them die! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stupid left wing socialist bastards..

  41. $79.7 million is a (relatively) small loss... by Chastitina · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ... as far as these things go. Considering that their losses are down to under $6 million/ year (per their last quarterly SEC filing), and that their income is up $0.5 million from a year ago while they've cut non-content-related (i.e. marketing and administrative) expenses by the same about, they could be viable in a few more years.

    It would take less than 200,000 new subscribers at the $30 rate for them to break even, less than 7% of the 2.7 million unique visitors they cite for December 2000.
    The main problem, of course, is time.

    Salon has been around since the beginning of the internet boom & have a loyal reader base. Unfortuntely, most of their readers are used to getting their info for free & at this point it's going to be an uphill battle to convince folks to cough up for what they've been using all along. Will they be able to do so before they have to declare bankruptcy? Let's hope not.

    1. Re:$79.7 million is a (relatively) small loss... by CanSpice · · Score: 1

      If $80 million is a relatively small loss, then I'd like them to lose an even relatively smaller amount (say, 1% of that $80 million) into my bank account.

    2. Re:$79.7 million is a (relatively) small loss... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To me, its not even so much that I can find free content - its more a matter of:

      When I go down to the local, can I take the print version with me to read at my leisure?

      Realise, not everyone enjoys burning out their eyeballs reading articles online. There are still people who prefer to relax and enjoy what they're reading. :-)

      Until I see Salon in the local shop, chances are I won't subscribe. Perhaps if they dropped the subscription fee and offered PDFs, that would be something worth considering (since I'd be paying for the connection, ink and paper.)

      Still, I wish them all the best! :-)

  42. /. them while they're down by fobbman · · Score: 5, Funny

    Damn, post a story about how Salon is losing money and then link them in the story? That's like telling your doctor that you have a headache and then they kick you in the nuts.

    1. Re:/. them while they're down by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 2

      Damn, post a story about how Salon is losing money and then link them in the story? That's like telling your doctor that you have a headache and then they kick you in the nuts.

      Yep, and hopefully this will continue until every website is destroyed.

      Then people will be forced to make the correct decision of migrating towards a P2P internet.

      Like most things, the previous generation stands in the way of the next. Most of the people holding the keys are trying to protect a dated and dying model based on advertising. That horse still has a little ways to go before it's dead, but we're getting there. Then we can build something that actually works, and that we actually own.

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
  43. Re:45,000 is small beans. Analagy to cable subscri by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The web sites still get the same amount of money, but if one 'net-network can provide a lower price but sell to more people, they can compete.

    The content providers have no incentive to employ a middleman for selling subscription packages in this scenario. Not when there's more money to be made by setting the price and selling access themselves.

    It would only increase technical complexity too.

  44. Liberal media by mao+che+minh · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Liberal media is not going to be wildly successful in the United States for the forseeable future. Let's face it, the average American is god fearing, believes that his government can do no wrong, is misinformed about their individual rights, has had little exposure to liberal setiments, is not politically active, and is primed to have a knee jerk-reaction to whatever liberal opinions that they might hear.

    Wake, work, pick up the kids, watch Friends, chat on AOL, sleep - repeat. Not much time left in that equation to develop a curiousity about politics (or the world in general, outside of your hometown and what you see on CNN).

    1. Re:Liberal media by silverbax · · Score: 1

      It's important to support liberal, accurate media amidst the onslaught of right-wing slanted media in existence.

    2. Re:Liberal media by geek · · Score: 1, Troll

      Could you point out this right wing media plz? It's been quite a while since there was a right wing centered media outlet, everything is liberal 24 hour news like CNN.

      Accurate is in the eye of the beholder these days, especially if you are claiming liberals are accurate. I think you are in serious need of a dose of Rush Limbaugh.

    3. Re:Liberal media by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2
      Could you point out this right wing media plz?

      You answered your own question. IIRC, Rush Limbaugh just signed the largest radio syndication deal in history. (Ironically, he harps about how his message is marginalized by the "liberal media" while doing record-breaking broadcast industry deals.) That's your right wing centered media outlet: Rush and all of his clones that dominate talk radio these days. Their influence is starting to take over TV as well, starting with the more obscure cable channels.

      Oh yeah... implying he's "accurate". ROTFLMAO.

    4. Re:Liberal media by geek · · Score: 2

      So you have ONE example to post? I can make a list of dozens of liberal media outlets, hundreds including locals across the nation, and you have the audacity to complain about Rush?

      Gimme a break.

    5. Re:Liberal media by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the myth of a liberal media"
      by Edward Herman

      and

      "Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media"
      by same

      and

      "news-the politics of illusion"
      by W. Lance Bennett

    6. Re:Liberal media by metachimp · · Score: 1

      There's this news channel called Fox News, which, while claiming to be fair and balanced, is nothing but right-wing propaganda. I'll bet that anything that doesn't reinforce your obviously right wing views is considered by you to be 'liberal', and therefore bad, even if it's simply corporate centrist infotainment.

      Limbaugh? You're a dittohead? I give up. There's no getting through to fools like you.

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
    7. Re:Liberal media by geek · · Score: 2

      "Limbaugh? You're a dittohead? I give up. There's no getting through to fools like you."

      Thank goodness, if you got through to me I'd want to be shot and put out of my misery.

      Fox is far from right-wing

    8. Re:Liberal media by Eccles · · Score: 1

      everything is liberal 24 hour news like CNN.

      Yeah, I mean that ultraliberal Robert Novak is on three different shows on CNN...

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    9. Re:Liberal media by NeMon'ess · · Score: 2

      how can god-fearing people watch friends? It's full of sex between unmarried couples.

    10. Re:Liberal media by geek · · Score: 2

      I dunno, ask Bill Clinton, he justifies that shit somehow.

    11. Re:Liberal media by Foamy · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Faux is far from right wing!

      Okay lets go to fauxnews.com, then list the shows and their hosts in column "A". Then let's list the political persuasion of those hosts in columns "B" and "C".

      Any objective minded person would have about 9 of 10 check marks in column "B".

      Now let's look at who we have in column "C", aka Liberals. Colmes, the doormat liberal who lets Hannity walk and talk all over him every night. That's it baby. The rest are unabashedly Republican...and don't feed me any crap about O'reilly being objective, or neutral, or unspun.

      You might also include some token, washed up radio personalities in your column "C". For example Juan Williams and Mara Liasson (sp?). Both of these poor bastards get browbeaten regularly by the 3 or 4 conservatives circling them like wolves to a baby fawn.

      So please, at least admit bias when it is so blatantly obvious, lest you become what you so despise.

    12. Re:Liberal media by NeMon'ess · · Score: 2

      yeah so my point was that plenty of god-fearing conservitives are just as bad about following their commandments as non-belivers. of course there are pleny of god-fearing democrats, but those people aren't always liberals.

    13. Re:Liberal media by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't understand the difference between liberal media and corporate controlled media? There isn't any liberal media left in this country - maybe the San Francisco Chronicle and some of the alternative weeklies in urban areas. What you think of as liberal is actually a balanced view. Rush, O'Reilly, Ann Coulter, Oliver North, G Gordon Liddy, need I go on?

    14. Re:Liberal media by Lovejoy · · Score: 2

      Let's face it, the average American is god fearing, believes that his government can do no wrong, is misinformed about their individual rights, has had little exposure to liberal setiments, is not politically active, and is primed to have a knee jerk-reaction to whatever liberal opinions that they might hear.

      Your implication that the average American is conservative because he/she is uncultured, stupid, or politically naive is intolerant, insulting, and yes, naive.

      Liberals like you shoot themselves in the foot because they reduce conservatives to a parody in their own minds. They fight "straw man" conservatives because they have need to reassure themselves that they while they may be in the minority, they are at least the "elite" "cultured" "intelligent" minority.

      President Bush is the perfect example of how this works. Liberals consistently underestimate him, call him stupid, make fun of his malapropisms, and then are shocked, SHOCKED, when he beats the living crap out of them at the polls.

      Many liberals, (yourself included, by your argument) would rather fight an imaginary conservative - an uncultured, reactionary boob, than the real conservative base in this country. After all, you can ALWAYS beat a figment of your imagination.

      Ad hominem attacks are just so much easier than actually discussing issues. Issues are so cumbersome... They require thought, research, and consideration. Much easier to write "Conservatives dumb. Liberals smart."

      I for one hope liberals continue to attack the straw man rather than taking up issues. It makes life for conservatives so much easier.

    15. Re:Liberal media by dubl-u · · Score: 2

      Could you point out this right wing media plz? It's been quite a while since there was a right wing centered media outlet, everything is liberal 24 hour news like CNN.

      Intriguing. Conservatives scream about the liberal media bias. Liberals scream about the conservative media bias. Will y'all get back to me when you let me know who wins at claiming to be the bigger loser?

      Personally, I'm upset about the dumb-ass media bias. There's a total of one high-quality US daily newspaper and zero high-quality US newsweeklies. I have to buy my newsweekly from fucking England.

    16. Re:Liberal media by Pathwalker · · Score: 2

      You appear to be missing one concept:

      The political spectrum is not an absolute measure, You view everything in relation to your own viewpoint.

      It is possible for someone else to view as centrist (or even right wing) a media source that you view as far left, because your own viewpoints lie to either side of the subject are looking at.

      Both of your views are correct, as you are evalulating based on your own frame of reference.

    17. Re:Liberal media by arthurs_sidekick · · Score: 1

      Moreover, look up the name "Roger Ailes" and find out about his history. For the last 7 years, he's been running a certain little outfit for Rupert Murdoch.

      And just because Williams and Liasson also work for NPR, don't think they're necessarily "liberals."

      --
      "Oh, I hope he doesn't give us halyatchkies," said Heinrich.
    18. Re:Liberal media by Def+Mango+Raygun · · Score: 1

      Yeah, just like Henry Hyde, Newt Gringrich and the mother of all crooks... Nixon

  45. Re:Leftist Leftover from the Dot Bomb Era by phippy · · Score: 1

    15 minutes ? try 7 YEARS. they've been around since 96.

  46. No Great Loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Salon.com used to have some entertaining cultural coverage and I think Charles Taylor is probably the best film critic writing today. Besides that, though, I won't be too troubled by its passing for the following reasons:
    • Smart-ass commentary where the writer ridicules some less than optimal decision by (the President, Congress, CEO's, investors, Major League Baseball, whatever) thanks to his perfect 20/20 hind-sight, yet never has to own up to his own mispredictions, no matter how gross.
    • Brain dead coverage of foreign events, particularly the Middle East. And by that I don't mean coverage I ideologically disagree with, I really mean _brain dead_, completely clueless, too stupid to live. Like a cover article they ran hailing the Saudi "peace plan" (remember that?) as the solution to all the Middle East's ills yet never bothering to read its actual text and see that it did nothing to address the Palestianian "right of return" issue that lead to the blow up at Camp David. There's also its moronic attempt to project domestic politics onto it so that if Republicans and Christian evangelicals support Israel (never mind that the country is more socialistic than France) it must be bad, and if the Palesitians are brown, poor, and miserable they must be good, never mind how many school buses or seder dinners they blow up in their nihilistic, barbarian rage.

    So in short, I won't be shedding too many tears over their demise, as there are a lot more online journals out-there, including some meta ones that have always been better anyway.

  47. one shot usage? by Flamesplash · · Score: 2

    How do those of use who will probably never use up the $25 keep from getting screwed? If I go to a site once it doesn't mean I'll keep coming. I'm effectively making $25 deposits on all these sites I may or may not ever use again. I hope they give refunds when I close the account.

    --
    "Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
    1. Re:one shot usage? by Ummagumma · · Score: 1

      I think the key here, is having a central repository for that $25 - kinda like a paypal type thing - when you make a micropayment at a website that recognizes your 'central repository', it comes from there. That way, only the pages you want get paid thier .25$ or whatever, and you only have one place to store that money, and worry about. And, you wont have to shell out $25 to each website you visit....

      --
      "The natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground." - Thomas Jefferson
  48. It's a shame by random_nick · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's a shame, because Salon is one of the best news sites ever in America. Salon's editorials and other pieces are just great pieces of journalism, from politics to sex. It's a bit like Wired was in it's best days. I can't think of any similar, independent site with attitude. I keep my fingers crossed for them.

    --
    Even random is random. My nick, too.
  49. Too Conservative by MacAndrew · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm kidding, I do agree Salon is liberal-oriented but have no problem with it given my politics. I'm pretty moderate and don't read Mother Jones or the National Review. Most magazines on/offline are politically oriented one way or another, most to far greater extremes. Perhaps out of concern for "balance" Salon has recently brought on Andrew Sullivan. I wish they'd found a better writer, but oh well.

    The remarkable thing about Salon is that it has actually broken a number of stories over the last half-dozen years. There are frequent examples of excellent writing (not all of it). Many people of influence keep track of what the journal is saying. That's quite an accomplishment, and a good deal more expensive to achieve than your average on-line reader-driven news clipping service (ahem).

    I would not encourage them to try to be all things to all people, if such a thing were possible. Certainly there could be editorial improvements, but nothing would turn Salon into a fount of wealth. The fundamental problem is the as-yet unestablished business model for this kind of thing. Others are watching Salon cast about for the answer -- the magazine is even polling its readers' opinions -- to learn from their success or failure.

    I finally did subscribe to Salon relatively recently -- I *hope* they don't go bankrupt! If they do, it will foretell decreased access to the online versions of traditional press, the failure of other online forums, and pressure on the rest to somehow raise profitability by increasing annoying advertising or other schemes. Despite it's far lower overhead, /. is not immune.

    Ask not for whom the bell tolls....

  50. Everyone's fault EXCEPT Salon.com's by DanEsparza · · Score: 1
    It's hard enough to launch a new publication. But doing it on the Web -- a new medium with no proven business models -- has been even more, uh, challenging, as they say in corporate seminars. Then you throw in a recession, the advertising market meltdown, 9/11, the Bush backlash against pretty much everything Salon stands for, looming war with Iraq

    Give me a break. It couldn't possibly be that perhaps, er, I mean just MAYBE ... not enough people actually wanted to use the site? I mean, it couldn't actually be the content, could it? Just a quick comparison the WSJ online (the other site linked to in the summary, above) has WELL over half a million online subscribers.

    That's a bit of a difference. Check out the numbers yourself at http://advertising.wsj.com/online/audience/index.h tml

    It seems to me that Salon.com wants to blame everyone but themselves.

    1. Re:Everyone's fault EXCEPT Salon.com's by geek · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Liberals always blame everyone but themselves. It's really classic liberalism :)

      People in America are fed up with it. The liberals caused the economic mess we are in and left it for the Bush administration. Then they go on TV and claim Bush is the root of all evil when the problems date back before Bush was even running as a candidate.

      Typical Democrat liberals, blame everything but their own wrong ideas. They haven't come up with anythiing original since the protests in the 60's-70's

  51. I wouldn't know by geek · · Score: 1, Troll

    I never bothered to go there, too many free news sites and such.

    I do get really turned off on the liberal media. Did anyone see Aaron Brown crying on CNN when the republicans won this last election? That was the last straw for me. American media is just way to liberal these days, purposely inflating issues to gain votes/ratings.

    The media is supposed to be impartial, reporting the facts and leaving us to draw our own conclusions. I can't think of a single media outlet that is friendly to that notion.

    1. Re:I wouldn't know by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Insightful
      American media is just way to liberal these days

      Mainstream American media outlets are no more liberal than the megacorps that own them. Is AOL/Time-Warner or Disney caling for the workers to take over the means of production? I don't think so. And journalists are, on average, more conservative on economic issues than most Americans.

      The myth of the "liberal media" is a successful marketing ploy of the right wing, matched only by their ability to convince average Americans that they are rich (in one poll, 19% of American voters surveyed believed that they fell into the top 1% income bracket) and thus should support their plutocratic policies.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    2. Re:I wouldn't know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jeez...how many fuckn communists post here anyway...this has got to be the 10th post copy-pasted from the works of lenin that's i've seen this morning...

      "the workers to take over the means of production? "
      "support their plutocratic policies"

      didn't you commie assholes starve to death...oh, that's right... a few escaped to the US so they could infect the rest of us...guess what dumbasses,we're sick of it...

      We don't watch your tv shows, vote for you, or care about your bullshit enviro-doomsday crap...or in this case support your trash webzines...
      get used to it...it's gonna get worse for you...

  52. Debt, Writing and Survivability by limekiller4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It has been noted that Salon's financial woes (how the hell did they rack up 80M in debt?) stems from them hiring good writers. Excellent writers, in fact, top-of-the-line. Noam Chomsky comes to mind. But I have to point out that Alternet.org has writing that is, IMO, and just a smidge to the left of Salon.

    So I have to ask, was the 80M in debt really necessary? Personally, I like Salon, and it is one of only three news sites in my bookmarks (along with the BBC and the aforementioned Alternet.org), and I am a subscriber to their premium service. But the idea that writers won't write unless they're paid is a lot like the RIAA saying people won't make songs if they can't !@#$ you in the butt for $16.99/cd. Just doesn't make any sense. But it sure seems to make sense to Salon:

    "The greatest weakness of Internet users -- all of us -- is our failure to recognize the value of intellectual property. Of course we love free access to information -- the more the better. For years, those of us who are information junkies have been like pigs in mud. It has been fun, but those something-for- nothing days are over. There is a difference between the Internet mantra that "information loves to be free" and free information."

    There is a large talent pool in the world, Salon. Use it. Big names are nice but big names are why you won't exist in a few years. The notion that talented writers only write if you lob a lot of money at them is just as false for the written word as it is for music.

    --
    My .02,
    Limekiller
    1. Re:Debt, Writing and Survivability by limekiller4 · · Score: 1

      Gah! I forgot to post the link for the blurb I quoted. Viz:

      "The greatest weakness of Internet users -- all of us -- is our failure to recognize the value of intellectual property. Of course we love free access to information -- the more the better. For years, those of us who are information junkies have been like pigs in mud. It has been fun, but those something-for- nothing days are over. There is a difference between the Internet mantra that "information loves to be free" and free information."

      Sorry about that.

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    2. Re:Debt, Writing and Survivability by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      Sure, there are plenty of people who write for nothing out there. Some of them are quite competant and interesting to read. But blogs are definitely what happens - irregular posts when someone finds something interesting, and almost purely opinion/what happened in my life. No investigate journalism.

    3. Re:Debt, Writing and Survivability by Peter+Trepan · · Score: 1

      just a smidge to the left of Salon.

      This strikes me as funny. Like "Just a smidge to the right of The 700 Club." :-)

      No flames, please. I like Salon, too.

      --

      Step into a huge movement. Don't Tread In Me.

    4. Re:Debt, Writing and Survivability by limekiller4 · · Score: 2

      I wrote:
      "...just a smidge to the left of Salon."

      Peter writes:
      "This strikes me as funny. Like "Just a smidge to the right of The 700 Club." :-) No flames, please. I like Salon, too."

      Well, they are fairly leftist, but still not quite as leftist as, say, Indymedia.org. =)

      Speaking of which, here is an interesting blurb from an article on Alternet regarding the relationship of America to off-center politics:

      "I remember in Antwerp one night, there was a debate set-up by the major Dutch language paper in Belgium... it was me, the former Prime Minister of Belgium -- who is a center-right politician -- and the former head of NATO, who is another Belgian. Of course we all talked in English and I couldn't help noticing that this center-right politician was farther to the left than any of the mainstream Democrats in this country. That just shows you how utterly anomalous the American political system is. We think here that we've got two parties and one's conservative and one's liberal. In the European context, the Republicans would be a right- wing party and the Democrats would be maybe a center-right party. I also think back to a guy I interviewed in Holland who said, "Look, I vote for the most conservative party in Holland and they're way to the left of your Democrats."

      Thanks for your reply. I mean what I say in my sig. Too much moderating, not enough discussion.

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    5. Re:Debt, Writing and Survivability by protonman · · Score: 1

      "Look, I vote for the most conservative party in Holland and they're way to the left of your Democrats."

      Which is moot considering conservatives want things to stay as they are, or at least, don't want things to change radicaly, and furthermore considering the general political climate in the Netherlands is to the left of the USA, Dutch conservatives are to the left of the Democrats. Still with me? Good.

      So this all doesn't mean the Democrats would be far right in Holland, and also doesn't mean the Netherlands do not have right-wing (by American standards) parties. It just means the political climate in the USA is more right-wing than in the Netherlands (or in Europe, AFAIK).

      Nothing special.

      --
      The man of knowledge must be able not only to love his enemies but also to hate his friends.
    6. Re:Debt, Writing and Survivability by limekiller4 · · Score: 1

      protonman writes:
      "So this all doesn't mean the Democrats would be far right in Holland, and also doesn't mean the Netherlands do not have right-wing (by American standards) parties. It just means the political climate in the USA is more right-wing than in the Netherlands (or in Europe, AFAIK)."

      This seems to be precisely what the original article stated, but perhaps you think it gave a different impression? What you just wrote is how I took it, anyway.

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    7. Re:Debt, Writing and Survivability by protonman · · Score: 1

      > but perhaps you think it gave a different
      > impression?

      Obviously ;-). But I think my impression was justified:


      We think here that we've got two parties and one's conservative and one's liberal.

      "Look, I vote for the most conservative party in Holland and they're way to the left of your Democrats."


      Which sounds like the democrats aren't liberal, or even center-right. But I could be wrong of course.

      But I thought the argument was to be synonymous with "I vote for the most right-wing party in Holland, and they're way to the left of your Democrats".

      My point is that comparing convervative parties is silly, because their programs depend greatly on the current situation in a country, more so than with socialists or muslim fundamtalists or whatever.

      But if you agree, all is well of course and I probably made a fool of myself ;-).

      --
      The man of knowledge must be able not only to love his enemies but also to hate his friends.
  53. I wonder... by craenor · · Score: 1

    ...if they'll ever figure out that we all came to the net to get away from commercials?

  54. woo!! I am the angel of internet publication death by ksuhr · · Score: 4, Funny


    I subscribed to Yahoo internet life last year -- dead after 3 issues

    I subscribed to Salon last month (admittedly I knew they've been in hot water more or less the last few years) and now this

    I oughtta start charging these companies for my not subscribing to them...

  55. But how did they lose $80 million? by Thud457 · · Score: 2, Informative

    $80 million.
    $80, 000, 000 !

    1. I could see $1e6/yr for staff (ok, so they're probably terribly overstaffed!)
    2. Toss in another $1,000,000/yr for facilites.
    3. x (what, like, ) 7 years.
    4. = $66 million PROFIT!

    If these guys actually burned through $80, 000, 000 , they're doing something wrong! (of course there was a lot of that going around in the 90's!)
    I don't even know what I'm doing, and I'm confident I could put together the equivalent for much less than that. The only difficulty would be getting the "A list" talent, and I'm not so sure that what they have is really that special.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:But how did they lose $80 million? by Dirk+Pitt · · Score: 3, Informative
      Check their annual report:

      Operating expenses:

      Production, content and product: $9.8M(2001) $10.1M(2000)

      Sales and marketing: $7.1M(2001) $15.5M(2000)

      For those counting, that's over $42 MILLION in operating expenses JUST between production, sales, and marketing in JUST the past two fiscal years. Looks like to me someone's spending too much on advertising and IT support... (or they have the most overpaid writers in the world)

    2. Re:But how did they lose $80 million? by kevinank · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Those don't look out of line to me. With 35 or 40 people on staff it wouldn't be unusual pay at all; they need artists, web designers, programmers, sys admins, and most importantly writers and editors. Throw in a CEO, a CTO, and two or three managers (operations, content, marketing) and you'll get to $9M very quickly.

      The sales figures are slightly disappointing actually. Ideally you would like to see sales and marketing costs increasing year over year since a majority of those costs probably stem from paid commissions. The implication is that they lost more than half of their sales revenues last year.

      --
      LibBT: BitTorrent for C - small - fast - clean (Now Versio
    3. Re:But how did they lose $80 million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      $9M/40 = $225000. A quarter million dollar average salary per employee?!?! Yes, that is out of line. None of the job positions that you mentioned, involve actually working that hard.

      I have a hunch that $6M of that went to one guy whose job involves playing golf.

    4. Re:But how did they lose $80 million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Current compensation of Salon officers is very low by Wall Street standards. Scroll down.

      A quick look through their sec filings, shows that they spent way too much money on real estate, and perhaps a risky employee stock compensation plan. Also, some mergers and acquisitions--all the rage in the gogo Nineties.

      (cutandpaste)

      EXHIBIT 99.1

      Monday May 8, 8:45 am Eastern Time

      Company Press Release

      SOURCE: Salon.com

      Salon.com Acquires Digital Audio Leader MP3Lit.com, Moving Further Into Broadband Arena and Developing New Potential Revenue Streams

      E-Commerce Division, LoudBooks.com, Featuring Downloadable Audiobooks Scheduled
      to Launch in Fall 2000

      (/cutandpaste)

      There's more juicy tidbits in the 8-K there, but lameness filter, you know. Kinda makes you feel nostalgic, don't it? LoudBooks.com.

  56. Re:almost by martyn+s · · Score: 1

    You need to revamp that sig. I like the idea, but it just doesn't flow right.

  57. Ummm dude...have you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...even read the article? Id says that Salon is LOSING money, but it doesent say that it is DEAD!

    1. Re:Ummm dude...have you by Skyshadow · · Score: 2

      No, I understand that, but never making money tends to bode poorly for the future of any business. I'm projecting out into the not-so-distant future.

      --
      Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  58. Are you kidding? by VT_hawkeye · · Score: 1

    the little guy, from whom we collect the REAL tax money from

    Please check out the last screen here. For those of you who are too lazy to click and scroll, I'll just take a couple numbers from there, Neal Boortz's program notes for Election Day.

    Taxpayers with incomes in the top 25% (above $55,225) paid 84.01% of total U.S. tax revenue. Taxpayers in the top 50% (above $27,682/year) paid 96.09% of all U.S. tax revenues.

    If someone is getting screwed, it sure ain't your sympathetic "little guy."

  59. Re:Good Riddance by random_nick · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am really curious that who are your journalist heroes, standing brave and smart in the spotlight, knowing everything about world politics.
    Would you name them please?

    --
    Even random is random. My nick, too.
  60. Take a page... by N8F8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Kuro5hin.org and SlashDot are successful if you look in terms of small-business successful. But not compared to Time and People magazine. Drudgereport is another example of a "success". It seems the key to success in this new medium is to keep overhead to a minimum and provide content that isn't availabile elsewhere.

    In other words, targeting specific consumers. Salon is out there covering much of the same material with the same slant as the mainstream media. Sure they do some innovative stuff and take a little more risk, but really not that often.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:Take a page... by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

      keep overhead to a minimum and provide content that isn't availabile elsewhere

      Tough to do if you're not "created" by motivated volunteers or unaccountable flights of fancy (drudge). One would hope to see Internet journals that compete with conventional ones in every way but on paper. I do see quite a few /. cites to their exclusive content, as well as their AP clipping service. As for /. itself, I don't envision an IPO anytime soon, though it it is reasonably likely to be commercially viable. This is the period of shake-outs in the industry, we'll see.

      Salon is a good deal more liberal than the "main course" press, so the more apt comparison is to other "second course" small-audience publications, which by definition have a tougher time surviving on the crumbs after we've paid for our NYT subscription and the like. I held out on subscribing to Salon for a long time, until I started to feel guilty and worried about losing the resource. As I mentioned earlier, I think it's stunning the stories Salon has broken (e.g., here; some argue Salon has lost its touch; another naysayer), and this distinguishes it from an also-ran journalistically if not economically.

      But I concede I may be overcome by wishful thinking; Salon perhaps has permanently lost its edge and is headed for that place old CPU's go to die.

  61. Once again, I'll ask how?!! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    It's not like they do that damn much!
    I know I'm kinda late to this party, the 90's are well over now, but come on people!! Haven't you seen the movie "Brewster's Millions"?!!!

    I could throw wads of $100 bills out the window to homeless people and I couldn't squander 1% of that much money if I did it 24x7x365 for the last ten years! (And I'd die of exhaustion before that because I never slept!)

    Stories like this just reek of creative accounting! MAYBE ADVERTISING ISN"T REALLY WORTH WHAT THEY"RE CHARGING YOU FOR IT, PEOPLE! The only way this makes sense is if that $725 million is internet monopoly money, and not good, honest U.S. greenbacks.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:Once again, I'll ask how?!! by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 2

      The only way this makes sense is if that $725 million is internet monopoly money, and not good, honest U.S. greenbacks.

      The internet monopoly money (VA stock certificates) came from real honest greebacks, though. $30/share back at the IPO price, and the $725 million VA lost doesn't even count the kickbacks to the brokers.

      Where did it go? Haircuts, groceries, rent, and gaming machines for employees like Cowboyneal, in part. Then interest to the banks (and REITs) which own pretty much everything else.

  62. I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by emil · · Score: 4, Informative

    Everybody have a look at http://www.mercedesproblems.com/ before you even think of buying one of these clunkers.

    I'm giving Volvo a try now.

    1. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by Corvaith · · Score: 2

      I'd be willing to bet, however, that I'm not the only one posting here who is more in the '10-year-old economy car' range than the 'new luxury car' range. Which makes the whole thing kinda moot. I do pay for Salon already, though.

    2. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I currently drive a 1984 Volvo 740 GLE sedan with 260,000 miles on the original engine (still passes emissions tests with flying colors) and tranny. I get about 25 miles to the gallon.

      The interior is black leather and is perfect, the exterior is silver and is perfect despite being an "outdoor" car. The car is as silent as on day one and it handles beautifully. My local Volvo dealer and I have a long standing relationship, their service prices are reasonable and their work is honest.

      Overall I have been very satisfied with my car, and I enjoy giving rides because I am often asked "How old is this car?" and then get to see the shocked look on peoples' faces when I tell them that it's nearly 20 years old and has more than 250k on the clock.

    3. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by NeMon'ess · · Score: 2

      Sure, cars are like wine. After a fine mercedes I like to try a rough chevrolet and maybe in a couple of days I'll have a classic jaguar. Okay so you didn't mean it that way but that's what came to mind.

    4. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by rowanxmas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm giving Volvo a try now.

      You dorealize that Ford bought Volvo? So only buy Volvo if you now want a piece of american shite.

    5. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by metachimp · · Score: 1

      I got that beat. I had a '67 1800s with 750K+ miles on it, original engine and transmission. I gave it a valve job, and when I had the head off, I measured the cylinders, and they were still at factory specs... They don't build 'em like that anymore. I recently drove a post-Ford Volvo, and found that the overall quality was just not as good as the pre-Ford models. Oh well...

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
    6. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Q: What sort of needle-dicked faggot actually PAYS to read Salon??

      A: You, apparently.

    7. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah but for the price you paid for it you could have bought three normal cars.

    8. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by cjsnell · · Score: 2


      What a bunch of crap. Car makers like MB make tens of thousands of cars every year--of course some are going to have problems. If there was a fordproblems.com (there probably is!), you could spend all week reading about peoples' problems with F-150s, despite their outstanding consumer ratings. What matters most is how the dealership treats you, but that's not even all that important. Many states have lemon laws: if a dealership makes too many unsucessful attempts to repair a problem, they must provide you with a new car.

    9. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a fuckgeneralmotors.com before, but that's a completely different story.
      See 2600.com for details

    10. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right ford owns volvo like GM owns saab. That doesn't mean the 93 viggen is a fucking chevette.

      Did you also forget that 'whatever the fuck their name is" owns slashcock.

    11. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I'm gonna have to toss in my volvo story. I grew up driving a 15 year old 240dl wagon. Now you try going to fucking highschool in one of those things. This chics that aren't too bored ignoring you are laughing their asses off. But I'll tell you what. I took a corner too fast one day and mowed my neighbors fence down like a john deer eating kentucky blue grass. The thing had close to 200k on it befor he had to get rid of it, and I used to smoke the shit out of the tires to boot. I got respect for volvo's. I just aint got 40gs to pick up a new one. My wife would go nuts anyway, since I'd have to smoke grass if got behind the wheel of one, just for good 'ole times sake.

    12. Re:I will NEVER buy a Mercedes again. by FinnishFlash · · Score: 1

      You do realize that Ford bought Volvo? So only buy Volvo if you now want a piece of american shite

      And even worse, american shite made by the swedes... shrudder.

      --
      please proff read !
  63. Your problem: you used AvantGo by irritating+environme · · Score: 2, Informative

    Why didn't you just grab the "print" version of Salon, which was just the article texts, every day? I've done pods development in AvantGo 3.x and 4.x, and its a serious piece of junk.

    --


    Hey, I'm just your average shit and piss factory.
  64. Re:45,000 is small beans. Analagy to cable subscri by Frobozz0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, we used Qpass, and they are either out of business or are on their way out. I'm not talking about that.

    I'm talking about a reputable company offering subscriptions to CNN, WSJ, Slashdot, etc... In response to the other fellow who suggested sites wouldn't do this, I could not disagree more.

    It costs much more for a company to maintain their own billing and subscription process than it does to receive a check every month from a middleman. The middleman is involved because he can give the user a REASON to buy the content. I'm not going to pay $19.95 a year per online magazine. I am going to pay that for 4,5, or maybe even 10 sites. Also, the individual sites do not have market themselves nearly as much because they will be getting advertisement though the middlemen.

    If done right, it will work. We aren't talking about a no-name startup selling no-name content to uninterested people. This will likely be an initiative by a large corporation with an establed brand or reputation.

    --
    "Politicians find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the people."
  65. and furthermore... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Assuming that money was real, you could put it in annutities and give 1450 people nice little trustfunds! The whole dotcom bubble could have permanently cured poverty and solved the homeless problem!

    What a world!

    1. Re:and furthermore... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the homeless would blow it all on crack cocaine and other alcohol/drugs.

    2. Re:and furthermore... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds infinately more worthwhile than the OSDN Disco Party at LinuxWorld starring RMS.

  66. fair use! by minus_273 · · Score: 1

    this being /. i say who cares about the site! lets take the articles directly from the writers and freely distribute them among ourselves. When we are done reading them and if we like it, we can go back to their individual sites and pay for them

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  67. Shocking!! by HorrorIsland · · Score: 1

    They had the very best politically-liberal thinkers alive, yet they can't make money? This is horrifying! Maybe we should each given them a percentage of our own income until they get past this crisis.

    1. Re:Shocking!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey had the very best politically-liberal thinkers alive, yet they can't make money?

      Isn't "politically-liberal thinker" an oxymoron?

  68. The death of News Media as we know it by geek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Personally I think the web is going to kill the news media as we know it today i think this is a good thing. We complain as a society when special interest groups taint our polititians, but we never flinch when they taint our news outlets.

    What it will boil down to is journalists will have to actually do something other than play on peoples emotions because the truth i.e. facts will be readily available on the net. The net will allow small time journaliistic talents to be heard on a large scale. As it is today the chances of becoming a notable and famous journalist is smaller than becoming the next Eminem.

    I'm personally sick of seeing Ashleigh Banfield on CNN dressed up like an Arab reporting on issues she 1) has no real clue about and 2) probably couldn't give a shit about anyway.

    Hasn't anyone been watching CNN? They report the same 2-3 stories all day, everyday. When they have been beaten to death they report them 500 more times until they are sure everyone in America has been brainwashed by it. Then they find 2-3 more stories that are exactly the same but have different faces.

    The liberal media is just out of this world these days. Nothing but crying and complaining and pointing fingers at everything and everyone.

    The answer is independant media run by people who do it in their spare time. Much like open source software where multiple influences and ideas are used. Right now you have nothing like that in the media, most of the news agencies are run by large corporations (MSNBC anyone?), or are influenced heavily by liberal democrats who care little about real issues.

    It's time we took the media into our own hands. There is no reason you can't report what is happening locally on your own webpage. Isn't this largely what slashdot is? It's news contributed by multiple sources for the benefit of it's own contributors. You get back what you put in.

    I'll end my rant there.

    1. Re:The death of News Media as we know it by Lovejoy · · Score: 2

      Ugh, I HATE Ashleigh Banfield. (She's on MSNBC, btw) Such a drama queen. Why do reporters think doing stand-ups IN FRONT OF places (AB ON LOCATION!)improves their reporting? The fact that she's THERE seems to be all she's got going for her. Banfield is the worst.

    2. Re:The death of News Media as we know it by geek · · Score: 2

      I like Paula Zahn less honestly, shes as fake as they get. Aaron Brown would be third on my list, the whole crying thing after the democrats lost the election pushed me over the edge.

      I think Dan Rather started the whole "On Location" thing. Notice he flys everywhere the action is so he can make sure it's HIS face we see and not some small fish.

    3. Re:The death of News Media as we know it by e40 · · Score: 2

      There is no replacement for old fashion hard work. Reporting is hard work, and the reason you don't see more of it these days is that hard work is expensive. All the networks are opting for "soft news", stuff that doesn't have to be researched, because

      1. it sells
      2. it's cheap

      I mean, if (approximately) 50% of the voters voted for Bush in 2000, how are they going to wade through a hard news story about anything??

      Frontline is the only (IMO) hard news program left on the boob tube. It is thoughtful, balanced and fair. You can't ask more from a news program, and those words don't apply to hardly anything on TV that calls itself news.

    4. Re:The death of News Media as we know it by geek · · Score: 2

      Interesting, thanks for the link.

      I agree, it is expensive to actually research something.

  69. YEAH BABY YEAH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone seen Austin Powers' Pump?

    I bet a news site would receive a lot of new hits if they featured dancing midgets.

  70. Do you understand these financial sheets? by zaqattack911 · · Score: 1

    I checked out the last quarter report.

    Only thing that stood out was under Liabilities:

    "Additional Paid-In-Capitol: 80million"

    then accumulated deficit: 79million.

    WTF does that mean?

    Costs on that sheet weren't so high.

    1. Re:Do you understand these financial sheets? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Quick and dirty definitions:

      APIC = cumulative money the company received for issuing stock

      Accumulated deficit = cumulative net losses of the company since inception (companies that have made money call this "retained earnings")

  71. OH MY GOD HE'S DONE IT AGAIN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Sexual Asspussy, I want to cream in your ass so hard - damn you fucking own Slashnut.

    Excellent work.



  72. GameSpot example by jvmatthe · · Score: 2

    Friends and I have been complaining about GameSpot's reviews recently (see here) but they still cover a lot of video game news and provide a lot of reading that at least has some facts in it, and occasionally good opinions. As a content provider, their value to me is in older stuff. I like going back and reading old reviews of games that are now on the used games bargain rack. To get to that stuff, however, you have to have a subscription. That's what I think is the interesting idea in GameSpot's model: you can have everything (mostly) that we publish for free as long as you come often to the site and read it within a week or two of the publish date. To read older stuff, you have to pony up. Thus, people who just want free news suffer the banner ads and GameSpot makes money. The people who want more (myself included) will pony up and as a bonus not ever worry about banner ads or being locked out of something.

    During E3, their bandwidth was excellent. I got some huge movies during peak hours as fast as my netpipe could pull it. The reviews go back to the Saturn days, which fits my interests just fine. I do wish they had more GameBoy reviews and more detail in the older reviews in general.

    Running a tiny little gaming site with a friend in my spare time, I can see why having a catalog of old content is valuable...I just have to look at the Google searches that lead people to my site. People stop in to see all kinds of stuff on my site, from months ago to yesterday. (Whether it's worth their visit, I have no idea. ;^D) This is precisely the observation on which I think GameSpot is betting their farm: people who want an extensive library of content will pay for it, even if the content is dated somewhat.

  73. "Print" versions OR raw text of entire day by Fencepost · · Score: 2

    One other person has recommended grabbing the "print" versions of articles you're interested in, which should do the trick.
    As an alternative, if you're a subscriber you can get the day's content as a single big text or PDF file - with the obvious exception of things updated during the day (and presumbly included in the next day's files). Easy to convert in any way you want.

    --
    fencepost
    just a little off
  74. In the marketplace of ideas.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one is buying what the liberals are selling. Boo hoo, so sad, bye bye.

  75. Just a suggestion by override11 · · Score: 1

    You could make it even easier.
    Have the ISP's pay a fee to content providers, and have that page (like salon.com) open their article's to any request coming from that ISP's IP block. Then ISP's would actually have something else to offer besides "the internet" and the pages like salon.com could be paid steadily. MAybe even make it a per-subscriber fee to the ISP. :)

    Anyone else think this could work?

    --
    No I didnt spell check this post...
  76. I'll work for a cent and a half a word or less! by Interrobang · · Score: 2

    I second that. There are a lot of people out there who'd write for Salon, Alternet, or anywhere for lots less than the going "slicks" rate, and even a lot less than the going "pulps" rate. Some of us are so desperate to see our names in print that we'll publish for copies...

    ...or post to Slashdot... :)

    I never tried to submit anything to Salon because I was always sort of intimidated by the calibre and "names" of the people who get published there. Then again, I never got to submit to Playboy in the 1970s when it was the ne plus ultra of SF short story markets, either, so...

    Interrobang,
    Killing media venues since 1994
    By getting Accepted for Publication
    (hm, maybe I shoulda submitted to Salon after all)

    1. Re:I'll work for a cent and a half a word or less! by limekiller4 · · Score: 1

      Email me, pls. You might have some insight on a project i'm working on.

      jason@macross.com

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
  77. I like this by victim · · Score: 5, Insightful
    160 responses on slashdot and virtually none that actually talk about the ultracommercial concept.

    I just went to salon and read a premium article. Here is my synopsis...
    • ultracommercial has a problem on their systems, I got pages of MySQL errors the first time I tried it. Oops.
    • The second time I tried I got to look at four spiffy pictures of a car with little click spots to get more info.
    • After the forth picture I was sent to the article I had been reading with a complete version instead of just the front quarter.
    • All in all, the ad took me less time than it takes me to walk outside and pick up my newspaper, plus my feet didn't get cold.


    If a 10 second ad can keep salon and their reporters working I'm all for it. The US needs independent journalists. (Even if they sometimes say things you'd rather not hear. Personally I'm offended by something in Salon every single day. If I wasn't, I wouldn't bother to read it.)
    1. Re:I like this by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1
      No, what we need is journalists that aren't brainlocked by ideology or simple stupidity. Yeah, many today say things "we don't want to hear" because it's lunacy and lies, not because it's some sort of unimagined or shocking truth.

      "Journalist" has become a laughable profession that people trust even less than lawyers. At least you can hire your own lawyer.

      --
      --- Ban humanity.
    2. Re:I like this by diesel_jackass · · Score: 2

      Aren't you a lawyer Mr. Birdman?

  78. CNN's conservative bias is almost as bad as Fox's by Von+Rex · · Score: 1

    They always portray conservatives in the most forgiving light possible but never shirk from repeating verbatim any off-base allegation a conservative can make about anyone to the left of Tom Delay. To a Rushbot like you that might make them "liberal", I suppose.

    The last time I watched CNN it was for about half a minute and that was enough to show their continual conservative bias.

    Paula Zahn was talking about the universal disgust and outrage everyone held for the democrats for turning a memorial for a man who dedicated his life to fighting the far right into a rally for fighting the far right.

    Her manner was so matter-of-fact, like the democrats had of course sunk to a new low of sleaziness, and everyone agreed with her, and the GOP was just doing their duty in pointing out the depravity of the Democratic party.

    Then CNN switched to a shot of Bush posing with a bunch of six year olds in yet another photo op. They didn't do this ironically, pointing out the hypocrisy of a man who uses small children as political props every chance he gets being outraged by the Wellstone memorial. No, they did it with a straight face. There's the great and kind President Bush, playing with children, because he loves them.

    Then they switch to another talking head, who calmly declares that while some Democrats have seen fit to criticize President Bush over his continuous fund raising in the face of a looming war, the President has many duties and it's fully within his rights to fund raise as much as he wants.

    This is supposedly the most "liberal" news network?

    I haven't seen any stories about President Monkey's military desertion or insider trading, either.

  79. I just did it. by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

    I clicked thru the ad and got this when I went to read my Premium article:
    Salon best upgrade something if they want this to work.

    Warning: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2) in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 43

    Warning: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2) in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 44

    Warning: MySQL Connection Failed: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2) in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 44

    Warning: MySQL: A link to the server could not be established in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 44

    Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 72

    Warning: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2) in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 43

    Warning: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2) in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 44

    Warning: MySQL Connection Failed: Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock' (2) in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 44

    Warning: MySQL: A link to the server could not be established in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 44

    Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc on line 72

    Warning: Cannot add header information - headers already sent by (output started at /www/site/common/everywhere_db.phinc:43) in /www/site/content/beta/run.stable on line 113

  80. Ever hear the word "hypocrisy", chum? by Von+Rex · · Score: 1

    I like how you claim "liberals" are always blaming others for their problems while in the same sentence blaming "liberals" for the disastrous Bush economy. But that's par for the course for the party that claims to represent personal responsiblity -- blame everything on Clinton.

    It's nice how conservatives never have to let worrisome reality intrude on their political theories. Otherwise they'd have to confront the eight years of unprecedented peace and prosperity of the Clinton years that were bookended by two Bush terms of recession, unemployment, deficits, and corruption.

  81. They stayed too far to the left. by Shivetya · · Score: 2

    Salon's problem is the same that liberal radio hosts (and to a similar extend liberal tv host - see Donhaue) faced.

    They don't offer any compelling reason to watch or listen to them long term. Usually the methodlogy followed was to attack instead of offering alternatives. People aren't going to pay to see you whine about stuff, even if they tend to agree with it. The left just doesn't support outlets like Salon.

    Salon did try to veer back to the center but they stayed left so long that they really could not convince people to look again.

    So now what? We are to feel sorry for them because they have to resort to such tactics to stay in business? I look at these types as ads as the flares of a sinking ship.

    Too bad its the Titanic and no one is around to rescue them

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:They stayed too far to the left. by metachimp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ummm.. Have you ever actually read any of the articles in salon, or are you just going by what you've read at NewsMax?

      Are you seriously suggesting that Rush, Ollie North, and the other right wing guys have anything to offer other than attacking? During Clinton's presidency, all they did was attack, all the time screaming about Clinton's sex life? I've haven't read much in Salon that can truly be classified as an 'attack'. Criticism is different than an attack. Read Arianna Huffington's column, you'll get alternatives, not just attacks...

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
    2. Re:They stayed too far to the left. by geek · · Score: 2

      Run on over to rushlimbaugh.com right now. Nothing but contribution.

      Quit distorting the truth and accept it.

    3. Re:They stayed too far to the left. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dream on. All the Republicans could do during the Clinton years was fixate on a real estate transaction called Whitewater that ultimately turned up fruitless, while Democrats don't even bother attacking Bush anymore because the right wing media will turn it against them. Learn to think for yourself.

    4. Re:They stayed too far to the left. by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

      I am blinded by the phrase "right-wing media". Unless you are referring to Fox news, All I got for eight years was all about what a wwwooooonnderful president Clinton was. Oh, and if you think lewinskigate was all bout sex you have got another thing coming: Paula Jones was attempting to sue Clinton, claiming he dropped his pants and told her to kiss his wee-wee, and Clinton denied her case evidence that he had a habit of soliciting oral sex from coworkers by committing perjury. In effect, he denied her the opportunity to submit supporting evidence by lying. That's not the fifth amendment. You're allowed to say nothing, but you're not allowed to make shit up to hurt your opponent's case, and you're not allowed, in a grand jury, to either take the 5th or deny actual facts. That's it- now you know why us right wing wackos had such a problem with it. He stole from Paula Jones. That's it. Whether you like it, whether you disagree or not, it was a violation of law. So was Watergate. Whitewater itself may not have yielded convictions with the surname Clinton, but many of the Clinton's friends and business partners have now served time in federal prison for their behaviors in this matter. No conviction doesn't mean lily-white behavior. Bush shouldn't get away with stealing your privacy, either.

  82. Pardon me while I wipe the tears from my eyes. by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 2

    You mean that Donna "Now how many times can I mention that I'm an SM-loving lesbian incest survivor in this article purporting to be about someone else" Minkowitz might have to look elsewhere for work? We might not be treated to weekly updates from Tom "recycled clipart and crack-addled politics -- two great tastes that taste great together" Tomorrow? There will be one less place for Andrew "Power Glutes" Sullivan to toady up to the GOP? Joe Conason will have to go back to sucking Al Gore's dick in the New York Press rather than in a national forum?

    What, exactly, is the downside here?

    I'll miss Charles Taylor, King Kaufman and Keith Knight, but I doubt they'll have much trouble finding work elsewhere. As for the rest of it, good riddance to bad rubbish. Maybe if Salon had stuck by its original intention of being an interactive Atlantic or Harpers for the web, instead of becoming a mouthpiece for the DNC cum get-rich-quick IPO scheme, it might not be in such dire straits today.

    --

    News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

  83. Knee jerk by mao+che+minh · · Score: 2, Redundant
    See the one "Flamebait" mod-down that I got almost immediately? This is an example of the knee-jerk reactions that I told you all about.

    My post did not show any favoratism for either liberal or traditional views - it merely exposed my opinion on why liberal media tends to fail. The post was, in itself, therefore liberal in nature. This said, the uneducated mod read my post, which caused some small spark to fire off in the subconcious of his tiny brain, and he quickly clicked on "Flamebait". I win by example. I am a prime time player. Troll mas fina baby.

  84. So did L. Ron Hubbard's by Fencepost · · Score: 2
    Elron's books became best sellers too. I think Dianetics is way up there on the all-time best seller lists. Heck, I'm pretty sure it's sold more copies than have been printed.
    Are Scientologists allowed to go into bookstores and leave without buying one of Elron's books (which can later be boxed up, sent back to HQ, and sold into a bookstore again)?

    Still, I don't think that's a significant part of Coulter's sales. I'd credit a lot of those more to the Jerry Springer mentality than to anything else.

    Finally the point: of the "successful news/opinion type sites" that are very conservative, how many of them are public and let you see their books? For the ones that are publically held, are there any where the numbers for the sites aren't buried with other items on an overall statement?

    I'll use Fox as an example - how profitable is the Fox News web site separate from the rest of the company? Is it subsidized by profits from elsewhere? Is it shortcutting quality journalism because by the time it comes out that the story was wrong it'll be off the front page anyway?

    --
    fencepost
    just a little off
  85. Re:I like this - me again, comparison to TIME by victim · · Score: 2

    I just followed google news to a story at TIME. Their article surrounded by a kalidescope of ads took more than 10 seconds to load over my DSL line. The article was presented in an uncomfortably skinny space left after the mass of garish ads were plastered around it.

    I can't tell you what any of the TIME ads were for. The only impression I carry away is that the article didn't have as much meat as I expected than the web site is annoying.

    I'll take a tasteful ultramercial once a day instead of a delay to load a mass of ads on every page.

  86. Bush-Bashing till the end! by Linuxthess · · Score: 1
    Then you throw in a recession, the advertising market meltdown, 9/11, the Bush backlash against pretty much everything Salon stands for...

    The suckers there must be taking this pretty hard. Come'on give our CIO a friggin break!

    ----------------

    --

    I sig, therefore I was.
  87. Re:woo!! I am the angel of internet publication de by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interested in a subscription to Slashdot?

  88. lol give it a rest by geek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Nice try.

    Blame is one thing, responsibility is quite another. Just try and deny the economic mess wasn't started int he clinton administration. Please try and deny that I would love to shoot you down.

    The dems however deny this flat out blaming Bush. Conservatives have no choice but to put blame i.e. responsibility where it lies in this argument.

    Nice try tho, if you weren't a liberal and capable of rational thought I would continue, but I wasted enough time.

    1. Re:lol give it a rest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you're capable of rational thought? Do you even know how supply side economics works? The cause of the Clinton Boom was the tax cut on the poor and middle class that was paid for by a tax hike on the rich. Oddly enough, the Democrats were able to get a small tax cut for everyone ($300) who made more than 12,000 a year into Bush's tax cut bill, but that wasn't enough to stimulate the economy out of the mess that was caused by the Enron fiasco. And I love how the Republicans blamed "liberal" California for the energy mess, when it turns out Enron and other energy companies manufactured those crises themselves and cheated Californians out of billions. I love it.

  89. Re:CNN's conservative bias is almost as bad as Fox by geek · · Score: 0, Troll

    You must be liberal, you absolutely twisted every fact to your own distorted end.

    Whats a matter, no one buying your bullshit anymore? lol

  90. Something wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    45,000 subscribers?

    No money?

    Come on...

  91. common by geek · · Score: 2

    There are a lot of liberals here. Some have been brainwashed by the PC movement so severely they have to run over to CNN and do a search for they're copy and paste answers to everything.

    1. Re:common by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you ever have anything sensible to say? Or just vague criticism of "liberals"? I bet you're the type of person who thinks Rush is getting too soft on "the left".

  92. Re:45,000 is small beans. Analagy to cable subscri by Eccles · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The content providers have no incentive to employ a middleman for selling subscription packages in this scenario.

    So why don't the authors market directly to us? Salon is already something of a middleman. The overhead of selling subscriptions is high enough that they don't want to be selling limited subscriptions for $5, but there may be a large market for buying limited subscriptions to a number of websites for $50, of which Salon might get a $5 cut. If you get more than six times as many subscribers that way as you would $30 subscribers by selling directly, it's a win.

    --
    Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  93. "Too" Liberal? That's a Laugher! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Actually, it's the other way around - when they started featuring that idiot Horowitz, self-hating dyke Paglia, and others, their "liberal" base, which came to the site from their days of hard-hitting anti-wingnut reporting during the Clinton Blowjob Affair, bailed out. They've been on a death spiral ever since...

    1. Re:"Too" Liberal? That's a Laugher! by geek · · Score: 2

      Oh but Pelosi will turn it all around for them, LOL

      That woman is as far left as it gets.

    2. Re:"Too" Liberal? That's a Laugher! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wouldn't think that if you were one of her constituents.

    3. Re:"Too" Liberal? That's a Laugher! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nazis don't consider themselves extremist either.

  94. Re:almost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try this sig on for size, bitch.

    --
    "The only place for religion in education in this great country of ours is to haul Jesus Christ to the front of the classroom during the Pledge of Allegiance and fist the fucker." --Abraham Lincoln, 1863

  95. Clearly biased by ZeLonewolf · · Score: 2

    the average American...believes that his government can do no wrong, is misinformed about their individual rights, has had little exposure to liberal setiments, is not politically active, and is primed to have a knee jerk-reaction to whatever liberal opinions that they might hear....Not much time left in that equation to develop a curiousity about politics

    ...

    My post did not show any favoratism for either liberal or traditional views

    ...

    Now, I'm not supporting any political position...but it seems obvious to me that your first post very strongly makes the statement that those that are not liberal are such because they are misinformed, stupid, or don't care. Conversely, you are saying that if people were properly informed and paid attention to current events, then OBVIOUSLY they would have liberal ideas. By adding the phrase about "knee-jerk reaction to liberal ideas", you are clearly associating the previous statements with non-liberals.

    --
    "If at first you don't succeed, lower your standards."
  96. Read their Financial Data by serutan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Everybody is asking, "How could an online magazine lose so much money" and everybody else is giving vague answers. According to their financial reports they seem to have trimmed down considerably this year, but looking at last year they were spending about a million a month on content and production, half a million on sales and marketing, $100k on research and development (??? you tell me) and about $400k on admin. That's $24 million a year right there. Losing $11 million/year doesn't seem so far-fetched.

    What interests me is that each of the two top execs made $300k last year. Not bad pay for shovelling venture capital down a hole, eh?

    1. Re:Read their Financial Data by geek · · Score: 2

      300k isnt what it used to be. In the silicon valley for instance if you don't make 100k a year you are lower class and barely able to sustain a living.

      Maing 300k on a two person income might allow you to send your kid to college.

      11m a year sounds like a reasonable loss to me considering journalists will be making 60-100k a year, plus bandwidth costs, admin costs, server costs, backup costs etc.

      100k on R&D is nothing. Thats the salary of one consultant coming to audit and test. Thats the cost of 100 servers in a server farm. Thats peanuts in an online business.

    2. Re:Read their Financial Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're full of shit.
      My family has never brought home anywhere close to that, and I'm a college right now.

  97. Salon's averageness is its problem... by CdotZinger · · Score: 4, Insightful


    ...not its dopey pro-rich-liberal bias or its coastline cliquishnes or its porn-driven, moronically desperate marketing schemes.

    And they've gotten more average as they've asked for more money. You can turn on any cable news channel and see Andrew Sullivan and Arianna Huffington saying the same stupid things they say in their Salon columns. Greil Marcus writes for every magazine on earth. Tom Tomorrow and Lynda Barry are more widely syndicated than Seinfeld. Damien Cave's tech columns are no better than your average +4 Interesting /. post or TechTV news update. Garrison Keillor is the most boring, played-out MF on the planet. (Etc.)

    They've fired their best writers (Paglia, for example) to cut costs, and hired utterly average dead-tree columnists (why King Kaufman and Allen Barra instead of, say, Ralph Wiley?--what is this, 1982?), and just flat-out failed to bring in interesting new people who could liven things up (Jim Goad, Nick Gillespie and Justin Raimondo could probably use a few extra bucks from side jobs, for example).

    Browse their archives from three to five years ago. The articles were mostly good. They were almost all interesting. Some were even surprising. But they waited until the site degenerated into PBS blandness (plus occasional class-baiting "I Was a Stripper for a Day" and "Trailer-Park Republicans: Whitey in the Wild" bilge and "classy" porn for prissy feminists and self-hating men) to start asking for money.

    That--and simple mismanagement--is why they're broke. And they deserve it. "Lilies that fester..."

    --
    Your mouth is like Columbus Day.
  98. They're Toast... by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 0, Troll

    Shut it down, retire gracefully, and go get real jobs or start a real company with a real product or service...

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  99. Re:CNN's conservative bias is almost as bad as Fox by metachimp · · Score: 1

    Ok, troll, I'll bite. Check this one out: It's a FAQ, if your dittohead mind can get around it...

    --
    The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  100. definitely not volvo either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    shouldn't buy a volvo as they are owned by Ford now. Ford is much worse a company than Daimler Chrysler and you should boycott all their products.

    Volvo and Mercedes both used to (and probably still to some extent do) make some pretty reliable clunkers. A shame that they sold out to the evil axis.

  101. Good riddance to liberal fascists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gee... every article seems to advocate taxation, regulation, and the suppression of all non-liberal political dissenters. I guess fascists really *don't* understand economics.

    1. Re:Good riddance to liberal fascists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Gee... every article seems to advocate taxation, regulation, and the suppression of all non-liberal political dissenters. I guess fascists really *don't* understand economics.

      Liberals are communists. Conservatives are fascists.

  102. hahahahaha by geek · · Score: 2

    Thats the funniest thing I've read all day. Thanks, i'm sending it to all my friends right now so they can laugh too.

    1. Re:hahahahaha by jefflinwood · · Score: 2

      Which parts did you find funny and why? Or don't you have any real criticism? I flipped through a few of those faq questions, and he even included the conservative view point for most of them. It's not completely balanced, sure, but the facts seem accurate on the ones I checked. Especially the car salesman :)

  103. Re:CNN's conservative bias is almost as bad as Fox by geek · · Score: 2

    Oh and of course leave it to the liberal to start with the name calling, I mean it's not like you had an actual argument right?

  104. advertisers wisdom by timestocome · · Score: 5, Funny

    When will it occur to Mercedes that anyone trying to save $12 a year in subscription costs probably isn't going out to buy a Mercedes?

  105. Re:45,000 is small beans. Analagy to cable subscri by SunPin · · Score: 1
    Hell no. That would qualify as a cartel.

    Breaking up AOSmell's exclusive content deals is a much better idea.

    --
    Laws are for people with no friends.
  106. Slashdotters should support Salon!! by mhackarbie · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I've been both a Salon and Slashdot reader for a while now and I just subscribed to Salon because I very much want them to survive. I also encourage all Slashdot readers to support Salon because some very disturbing changes are taking place in our political system. For the first time, there is no judicial oversight of the government for secret search and surveillance of the U.S. public. Even if you believe that our freedoms must be compromised for the sake of security, the danger comes when these new investigative powers are abused and used against people for reasons other than the war on terrorism.

    The only way for us to become aware of such abuses is to have a strong alternative to the mainstream media. So I would urge all slashdotters, even those who are usually apathetic to political issues, to invest some time and energy in political awareness and support for independent journalism. Otherwise, someday you may find yourself at the wrong end of a law enforcement process gone out of control.

    mhack

    --
    Building a better ribosome since 1997
    1. Re:Slashdotters should support Salon!! by geek · · Score: 2

      Typical liberal trying to play on peoples fear of the unknown. Even if we were to assume your argument was true, which it isn't. What part does your warped thought process think Salon plays in it?

      Salon is a joke, they are failing for lack of good content, period.

    2. Re:Slashdotters should support Salon!! by mhackarbie · · Score: 1

      You say my argument isn't true, and yet you don't say why. It seems like yours is the thought process which is lacking something.

      --
      Building a better ribosome since 1997
    3. Re:Slashdotters should support Salon!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He (uid: geek)'s not very smart; don't worry about him trying to make an argument, he hasn't done so yet.

  107. Dead-tree opinion magazines by atlee_parks · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think most of the opinion magazines operate on profit margins ranging from slim to negative and are at least partially reliant on the kindness of wealthy owners or public grants. National Review has William F. Buckley, The Weekly Standard is the pet project of the Kristol family, The American Prospect got bailed out by Bill Moyers a couple years back, Harper's has had a several near-death experience, Paul Newman and Robert Redford are co-owners of The Nation, and gazillionaire Mort Zuckermain bailed out The Atlantic Monthly from a severe deficit. Even the popular market is awfully tough -- just ask Oprah or Rosie, or the people who used to run Jane and Sassy.

    All of the opinion mags above target roughly the same demographic as Salon (if not necessarily the same ideologies), and all have equivalent- or higher-quality writing, established reputations, and an existing subscriber base to draw from. The surprising thing is that anyone ever thought Salon's business model would surpass them.

    1. Re:Dead-tree opinion magazines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oprah is money. Fortune magazine says of O that it's "by some measures the most successful magazine startup ever" (source).

      The cases you cite are interesting, but Oprah is money. She knows her audience and her business--or I am grossly misinformed.

    2. Re:Dead-tree opinion magazines by dubl-u · · Score: 2

      All of the opinion mags above target roughly the same demographic as Salon (if not necessarily the same ideologies), and all have equivalent- or higher-quality writing, established reputations, and an existing subscriber base to draw from. The surprising thing is that anyone ever thought Salon's business model would surpass them.

      Well, the notion that the web would be different was one a lot of people had. The theories behind it weren't bad: Distribution is much less of a headache; electrons are cheap and do what you tell 'em. You have much better information about your readers, so web ads should be more valuable. The Internet, even in English, has a much broader reach, so your potential readership is larger. And the web was going to be big, big, big!

      Of course, it didn't pan out that way. A big part of the problem was that Salon was competing with people who had a big pile of VC money that they were determined to blow. As you point out, a lot of those labor-of-love magazines have the same problem: they're competing against people who don't have to break even.

      And it doesn't help that everybody, as Slashdot demonstrates, seems to have gotten the idea that stuff on the web should be free.

  108. Lottery Micropayments by Gorimek · · Score: 2

    As others mentioned, payments under $1 are completely unfeasible due to PayPal fees.

    One solution is that instead of paying $0.25 each time, you pay $25 1% of the time, at random. This avoids the impossibility of small payments, and costs the customer just as much in the long run.

    Sure, you can have a run of bad luck and pay a bit more for a while. If that really bothers you, don't join the scheme. For those who can handle that uncertainty, it is a feasible way to actually implement micropayments. And it's the only one I've heard of.

    1. Re:Lottery Micropayments by jdludlow · · Score: 5, Funny

      Uh huh. And the code looks like this.

      /** Decide if payment is required.
      * @author Jim - IT Development
      */
      public boolean isPayment {
      /* 1% chance of payment */
      //if (Math.random() < 0.01) {
      // return true;
      //}
      //return false;

      // Fixed a bug (Bob - Marketing Department)
      return true;
      }

    2. Re:Lottery Micropayments by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      // Fixed a bug (Bob - Marketing Department)
      return true;


      Surely you mean:

      REM FIXED A BUGG
      REM BY BOB FROM MARKETTING (HI MOM!!!!)
      GOTO 10

  109. We need Salon more than Salon needs us by annset · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It seems to me that many of these responses to Salon's troubles miss the point, focusing almost exclusively on the magazine's perceived business failings. Whether or not they, or the .com downturn, or the nation's dwindling supply of patience for in-depth and serious-minded news coverage, are to blame for the magazine's dire straits, the fact remains that Salon maintains a standard of journalistic quality and integrity that will be sorely missed if they should go out of business.

    As many of my worthy peers have pointed it, Salon does lean a little left, no doubt about it. But given our country's recent and violent list to starboard, and our Democratic leaders' apparent unwillingness or inability to act like a real opposition party, we need magazines like this more than ever.

    1. Re:We need Salon more than Salon needs us by mhackarbie · · Score: 1

      Well said!

      --
      Building a better ribosome since 1997
    2. Re:We need Salon more than Salon needs us by geek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "But given our country's recent and violent list to starboard"

      What, like defending our nation? Jesus, give it a freaking rest already with that liberal propaganda.

    3. Re:We need Salon more than Salon needs us by metachimp · · Score: 1

      So, I take it that you'll be joining our armed forces soon right? Or are you going to develop a bum knee? Anal cysts like your hero Rush? Or will you go through what Tom DeLay did and try to join up, only to be denied a spot because minorities are taking up the available slots. I guess you could always join the Air National Guard and then not bother to show up... Perhaps you have 'other priorities' like Mr. Cheney?

      You disgust me. I did my time in the Navy (USS John A Moore, FFG 19) , and what these people are doing has nothing to do with defending this country, and everything to do with lining their own pockets. If they were truly interested in defending this country, how come Osama Bin Laden still lives? My colleagues in the Armed Services didn't join up to preserve Exxon's bottom line.
      I don't want to hear you, or Limbaugh or freakin' Saxby Chambliss ever talk about 'defending' this country, since they were obviously too chicken shit to toddle on down to the recruiter and so much as join the fucking National Guard.

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  110. Salon's problem... by Distan · · Score: 1

    The heart of their problem is that their journalism is far too wacky-left-wing for the market. Maybe if they pulled a little more back to center they would stop driving readers away.

    1. Re:Salon's problem... by phippy · · Score: 1

      it's NOT driving people away. they have 45,000 paying subscribers. even then, tho, they have trouble keeping afloat. if they go down, it's not because people don't want to read them.

      do you have a suggestiong for a more balanced (closer to center) online magazine that isn't backed by a big corporation ? if you do, then i might agree with you.

  111. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  112. Re:When did Chomsky pen an article for Salon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They've linked to an audio files of his, they've interviewed (w/ the typical corporate media bias), and they refer to him occassionally in other writers works. But I can't recall ever having seen an article for Salon by the man himself...

    I like Salon most of the time myself. But let's not give them credit for being _that_ responsible...

  113. The Right Wing and its Liberal Media Pressure Play by grubert · · Score: 0, Troll

    It seems pretty obvious that the chorus of complaints about the "liberal media" are a right-wing ploy to make sure the media are anything but. The unprincipled air-heads who make up the majority of corporate media workers want to make everyone happy, the better to sell product.

    Right wingers, long aware of the value of a well orchestrated campaign, endlessly scream and whine "liberal media!." In response the media goes right wing. Repeat ad nauseum for 20 years, and look at what we've got today: a national 24/7 advertisement for the RNC.

    The whinefest about the Wellstone memorial was the latest highly effective intimidation campaign by the right-wing media. It worked like a charm.

  114. LOL by geek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Just an example of Democratic liberals not knowing how to manage money if you ask me.

    "OMFG a recession? RAISE TAXES!"

  115. Oh please, oh please... by nametaken · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I just want that crap site to die. The worst, liberal crap done in the name of "journalism" that I have ever read.

  116. Re:woo!! I am the angel of internet publication de by quantaman · · Score: 2
    --
    I stole this Sig
  117. Re:CNN's conservative bias is almost as bad as Fox by metachimp · · Score: 1

    So, can you illustrate for us liberal idiots why supply-side economics works, even though it doesn't?

    Perhaps you can explain to us how the establishment clause in the constitution doesn't mean what the Supreme Court says it means?

    Can you tell me why the Republican party works to drive down voter turn-out via attack ads? (Here's a clue: if everyone voted, they'd never get elected dog catcher, let alone president)

    Do you know who Richard Mellon Scaife is, and what he spends his money on?

    Could you tell us exactly, in one sentence, what Bill Clinton did that warranted an impeachment? (The following are not acceptable answers: Anything having to do with consensual sex, character, dead people in Arkansas, foolish real estate investments)

    Also, I didn't realize that Rush was a deep political thinker. Funny, I don't remember reading any of his work while studying political science.
    I would also add at this point, that conservatives have valid points, and there are some conservative thinkers that have interesting and possibly workable ideas. However, Limbaugh is not one of them. If you're going to run around spouting conservative ideas, at least get some better role models like Bill Buckley, John Dean and William Safire. Thoughtful, intelligent conservatives willing to engage in a real debate further your cause much more than people like Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly who can't handle it when people disagree with them.

    --
    The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  118. Salon: great mag, awful webzine by Alomex · · Score: 2


    Salon magazine is a great magazine, but it has never gotten the web. The greatest advantage of the web is that "the content is out there".

    Rather than paying $100K to traditional writers to pen articles in HTML instead of a remington, they should have tapped into the plethora of expertise available in the web, at much lower rates.

    A magazine that really understood how the web operates would

    (1) have a lot more letters from the readers

    (2) allow the best, most informed letters to become part of the article (kind of /. with professional moderators)

    (3) invite leads from the readership at large which would then be completed jointly with a journalism major

    (4) Publish a large number of articles a day under this model, making it more likely that people would pay for a subscription

    (5) ???

    (6) profit

  119. The Right Wing and its Pressure Play by grubert · · Score: 0, Troll

    It seems pretty obvious that the chorus of complaints about the "liberal media" are a right-wing ploy to make sure the media are anything but. The unprincipled air-heads who make up the majority of corporate media workers want to make everyone happy, the better to sell product.

    Right wingers, long aware of the value of a well orchestrated campaign, endlessly scream and whine "liberal media!." In response the media goes right wing. Repeat ad nauseum for 20 years, and look at what we've got today: a national 24/7 advertisement for the RNC.

    The whinefest about the Wellstone memorial was the latest highly effective intimidation campaign by the right-wing media. It worked like a charm.

    Oh, and to stay on topic: Salon is great. Other then for Horowitz and Sullivan, I'm completely happy about spending $30 for a premium subscription.

    1. Re:The Right Wing and its Pressure Play by grubert · · Score: 2, Funny

      Does anyone have anything intellegent to say about my little observation/theory? Other then to mod it a troll?

      Ya know, Socrates was a troll. But sometimes, a troll *is* just a troll.

    2. Re:The Right Wing and its Pressure Play by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok,ok...lets see...

      "It seems pretty obvious that the chorus of complaints about the "liberal media" are a right-wing ploy to make sure the media are anything but."

      -Ah yes,of course..."vast right wing conspiracy"...i see...pffhhtt

      "The unprincipled air-heads who make up the majority of corporate media workers want to make everyone happy, the better to sell product."

      -and this is why it constantly leans to the left...duh

      " Right wingers, long aware of the value of a well orchestrated campaign, endlessly scream and whine "liberal media!." In response the media goes right wing."

      -Uhhhh,no...NBC/ABC/CNN/etc are all hopelessly left wing and haven't budged an inch rightward...The only thing even REMOTELY right is FOX..wow,1 out of all the rest...yep another "vast right wing conspiracy"

      "Repeat ad nauseum for 20 years, and look at what we've got today: a national 24/7 advertisement for the RNC."

      -BWAHAHAHHAHAHAAAAAA....OMG that's a hoot.
      No, what we've got NOW is a socialist propaganda machine that would make lenin cream his pants.

      "The whinefest about the Wellstone memorial was the latest highly effective intimidation campaign by the right-wing media. It worked like a charm."

      -Intimidation?!?! By pointing out the obviousness disgust people felt at a party that would use a period of grief as an opportunity to push their sad agenda??
      I guess people should be used to that from the left though...although it's hard to pretend that they don't do stuff like that when it's at a FUNERAL!!!

      "Oh, and to stay on topic: Salon is great. Other then for Horowitz and Sullivan, I'm completely happy about spending $30 for a premium subscription. "

      -A fool and his money...

  120. 45000? Print mags would kill for that! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, excepting things like "Time", 45,000 is a pretty healthy subscriber base for a print magainze, and salon doesn't even have to worry about the print part. Sounds to me like too many nerf toys and aeron chairs.

  121. my grouse by rnd() · · Score: 2
    <GROUSE>
    I submitted this last night!

    2002-11-20 05:54:44 Salon explores new web ads (articles,news) (rejected)
    </GROUSE>
    --

    Amazing magic tricks

  122. Wake Up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Why do so many countries fear the message of White Pride?

    Any idea brought forth in an open society is exposed to criticism. If I claim to be able to make psychic predications, it should come as no suprise that many people will seek to prove otherwise, or just outright laugh at me. If I want to make a statement that I believe blue shirts cause violence, people are going to want to see statistics and evidence, right? No rational person would believe such things without evidence. It is up to you, the reader, to study the facts and decide for yourself what is true and what is false. This is your right. You don't have to believe things that are obviously false, no matter what people in power tell you.

    Fortunately we have the freedom to criticize many ideas today. Almost no idea is censored in modern western countries. The few extreme elements of society like drug-users, pedophiles, and homosexuals are each day considered more and more mainstream, and many of their ideas are becoming the "norm." But while countries work to legalize things like prostitution and drug usage, at the same time they make stricter and stricter laws against so-called "hate speech."

    Why? Why is information about White Pride censored when virtually anything else is published openly? Why can any idea be exposed to criticism except when it has to do with race?

    The fact is Jews, liberals, and people in power know exactly what the message of White pride means and how powerful it is. Unlike their attempts at social engineering, our message is based on fact and reason. This is what makes it dangerous to them. It doesn't matter how much propaganda about "equality," "reparations," and "diversity" they hammer us with. When people see the evidence, and evaluate the facts for themselves, they will come to the same conclusions that other informed White people have. No amount of Jewish lies will stop the truth. They know this and fear it. This is why they try to suppress us.

    So what should you do about this? Open your mind, and visit White Pride web sites like the National Alliance, White Civil Rights, and Stormfront. Get a copy of David Duke's My Awakening. Read what they have to say and make your own conclusions -- does what they say agree with the evidence available? Have your own experiences verified what they are saying? No one is going to tell you what to think, because it is up to you to make your own decisions.

    Try asking yourself questions like:

    • Why do we send billions of dollars of "aid" and weaponry to Israel every year?
    • Why do non-whites commit far more crimes than whites even after all these years of affirmative action and welfare handouts?
    • Are racial quotas in the workplace fair?
    • Why are we told there are no differences between blacks and whites when we can clearly see the physical differences in their bodies?
    • Why is Africa still in the stone age?
    • Why is illegal immigration accepted and encouraged in the USA?
    • Why is news about the Israeli spy ring caught in the USA only reported in foreign newspapers?
    • Why is the government afraid to report the truth about the Anthrax letters?
    • Why is the government continually increasing its control over our lives?
    • Why is our media so dedicated to corrupting our children's morals?
    • Why does the number of people killed in the Jewish holocaust keep changing?
    • Why has the Wichita massacre gone unreported?
    • And so on....
    The truth will not be stopped!
  123. Not communist, fascist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish! Really, it's more of a pseudo-right: socialists deisguised as conservatives. Take Dubya for example: he's basically a far-left communist who wants to expand federal government and remove states' rights, get government involved in everyone's life, and increase the national debt.

    Perhaps, but he's perfectly happy letting big business and the rich get bigger and richer under his regime, instead of government ownership of everything. That's facism, not communism.

  124. Wow, that's quite an anacronism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    organized, public education in the 1860's... nope.

    "front of the classroom" as an educational concept in the 1860's... nope.

    Pledge of Allegiance mentioning god before 1954... nope.

    Pledge of Allegiance before 1892... nope.

    President who believed in god suggesting that a perverted form of sodomy known as fisting be done to what he considered a divine being... nope.

    Probability that you could be outwitted by an overripe grapefruit... very high.

  125. He said balanced and impartial. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you must be a little left of Stalin to think any of these sites are balanced, and a little left of sanity to think they are impartial.

    1. Re:He said balanced and impartial. by sco08y · · Score: 1

      To be fair to Stalin, he just murdered 40,000,000 people. At least he wasn't into all that Kumbaya crap.

  126. Thus speaks the wannabe unabomber groupie... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, dude, like how much can I pay to learn lesson 58? How much for the whole mind-blowing set?

  127. keep spewing by geek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I already did my time, 7 freakin years ago. You just dont quit with the stupidity do you?

    The fact you can say Bush isnt defending our country makes you a traitor in my eyes. Its idiots like you that let Bin Laden exist (Carter anyone?).

    Run along now little one, you ran out of lies years ago.

    1. Re:keep spewing by metachimp · · Score: 1

      So basically anyone who doesn't share your views is a traitor? Do you even know what treason is? You don't mess around with words like that. If you told that to my face, I believe you'd be picking your teeth up off the ground one by one. I believe that what the administration is doing is wrong, but I would never accuse them of treason. To oppose what they want to do is called *dissent*, not treason.
      Are you even going to try to address the points I've managed to bring up? Or are you just going to call me names? If you can't handle yourself in a debate, don't engage in one.

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  128. Another Liberal Rag Goes Poof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another Liberal Rag Goes Poof

    enough said.

  129. Salon's losing money--- How could this happen?!? by Ominous+Armed+Cow · · Score: 1

    Look at that outstanding business model:

    1) write a bunch of whiny tripe attacking the most popular president in the last hundred years.

    2) ask for people to pay to read it.

    3) watch the money roll in!

    Gee, do you think this might be why Donahue's ratings are bested by the weather channel? How come conservative shows like Rush Limbaugh and Fox make money like gangbusters, but shows which reflect the elitist views are always market failures?

  130. salon's like an endangered species by nsda's_deviant · · Score: 1

    one of the great things of the internet glory years was the amount of great information that was acessible for the first time. salon's articles are generally pretty good and are fairly interesting and itd be sad to see a resource like that die out. its sad they havn't found a sucessful profit model but itd be nice to see someone buy them out and run them as a profit making vehicle....

  131. Hmmm.... by Ominous+Armed+Cow · · Score: 1
    Another one who doesn't seem to understand that fascism is a form of economic and political collectivism, which is why the word "Nazi" is a german acronymn for the "National Socialist Workers Party"

    Conservatives advocate economic and political freedom for individuals, if not social freedom. That is completely at odds with a statist regime.

    Unfortunately the same cannot be said for busy-body do-gooders on the left who believe that enlightened interests should be advanced by government fiat regardless of popular sentiment.

    1. Re:Hmmm.... by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      which is why the word "Nazi" is a german acronymn for the "National Socialist Workers Party"

      The "National Socialist" name was propagandistic, dumbass. The Nazis needed all the political leverage they could get in the twenties. Hitler figured people would be dumb enough to fall for this, and he was right. In fact people still fall for it even today.

      It's like the "Recording Industry Artists of America". Don't believe everything you read.

    2. Re:Hmmm.... by n9hmg · · Score: 1

      But the result was just the same as regular socialists. "Let's pool all of our resources to be used for the greater good", which is, of course, the good of the ones in power. Again, very like unto the RIAA. Good analogy, just not the way you meant.

    3. Re:Hmmm.... by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      The "National Socialist" name was propagandistic, dumbass. The Nazis needed all the political leverage they could get in the twenties. Hitler figured people would be dumb enough to fall for this, and he was right. In fact people still fall for it even today.

      It's like the "Recording Industry Artists of America". Don't believe everything you read.

      If you're going to flame somebody, get your own facts straight first. The first A in RIAA is "Association," not "Artists."

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  132. "other sites"? It's not even working for them. by Ominous+Armed+Cow · · Score: 1

    It's such high quality that they are sailing into bankruptcy. Those poor, misunderstood geniuses!!!

    Maybe we need a state fund to help us poor slobs appreciate them more.

  133. Your definitions are off. by 17028 · · Score: 1

    conservative
    \Con*serv"a*tive\, n. 1. One who, or that which, preserves from ruin, injury, innovation, or radical change; a preserver; a conserver.
    The Holy Spirit is the great conservative of the new life. --Jer. Taylor.
    2. One who desires to maintain existing institutions and customs; also, one who holds moderate opinions in politics; -- opposed to revolutionary or radical.
    3. (Eng. Hist.) A member of the Conservative party.
    Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.

    liberal
    \Lib"er*al\, n. One who favors greater freedom in political or religious matters; an opponent of the established systems; a reformer; in English politics, a member of the Liberal party, so called. Cf. Whig.
    Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.

  134. speaking of subscriptions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I used my last pageview looking at this article.

    Feh.

  135. Re:lern tu reed by ZeLonewolf · · Score: 2

    Communism is a poor example...on the other side you have Fascism, which almost everyone would agree is just as bad if not worse, with the same inability to say why.

    --
    "If at first you don't succeed, lower your standards."
  136. six ton elephant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's like a six ton elephant on Salon.com and nobody's mentioned it. Salon sucks AS a website. It has way too much media on the first load, so it takes forever on a dialup. It doesn't degrade well. There are still plenty of people in the juicy demographics who don't have broadband at home. Are they going to plunk down for something that klunky? Not likely. They'll just look at Salon while they're at work, but wouldn't pay for it. Maybe if broadband REALLY takes off in the US Salon can start raking it in. And maybe Macromedia is future of the internet.

  137. Choosing lefty rags by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to subscribe to salon.com but I spent all my money on yellowtimes.org. ;)

  138. Fuck'em. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The world has gone insane. I've been working on my own company for around 2 years and saving for my start date. I work 3 jobs (only 80-100 hours per week). When I see these fucking idiots that can blow through 80 Million dollars and have next to nothing to show for it, I want to tatoo "Dot Com Failure" on the forehead of every person involved in these companies.

    Oklasoft, what a great name for a company.

  139. They have that...it's called PBS & NPR by FireBreathingDog · · Score: 1
    The public is already being forced to pay for liberal commentary that nobody cares enough about to actually pay for themselves. On TV, it's called PBS, and on the radio, they call it NPR.

    Of course, selling liberal opinions on the web might be difficult since you can get them for free from just about every other media outlet.

  140. Why subscribing might be a good idea by BoneJ · · Score: 1

    The possiblity of Salon going under is just another example why the Internet is still a difficult medium for commericial profit. I think Salon is a great newssource: it's edgy, insigthful, has guts, etc. Has anyone noticed lately how anything non-generic just isn't cutting it anymore in regards to profitability on the net? During the dot.com boom, there was a general sense that edginess and novelty would work, but after so many sites have had to shut down, it's becoming obvious that the majority of people actually would prefer to read msn.com on the 'do's and don'ts of job interviews' or 'the top hot presents for christmas this year' than these news sources. The fact that Salon is doing crummy financially is due to this fact, but also that those interested in this kind of alternative news are preferring to find their news for free. Sure, it's find to use free sources, but at some point it may be good to take some responsiblity and respond to these publicity issues and subscribing for that reason alone. It really is one of the better ways to show that demand for alternative media is there - numbers don't lie. Not to sound grandiose, but it's about defining again what the 'net should be used for, and showing by profit and numbers that there are people who will pay for edgy news sources, just like people subscribe to, say USAtoday for the more general stuff. Just my two cents.

  141. Re:CNN's conservative bias is almost as bad as Fox by superyooser · · Score: 2
    Oooh, now that is some sizzling political/philosophical commentary. He says that moral relativism is good... and implies that you're bad if you disagree with him. ;-)

    I'm not completely sure that the site isn't a parody. But I have to give credit where credit is due. Those liberal geeks are definitely on the cutting edge of technology.

    <title>STEVE KANGAS' LIBERAL FAQ</title>
    <meta name="GENERATOR" content="Mozilla/2.01Gold (Win32)">

  142. I'm subscribing by skelf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've never been a subscriber to Salon, and I wouldn't say their content is all great, but one of the things that worries me most these days is the airtight corporate control over all our major (and minor for the most part) media. Salon at least does some independent investigative journalism and is not afraid to print stories from one of my favorite journalists, Greg Palast, including his exposé of the Florida election theft in 2000, and his "re-exposé" of the same thing still going on in this year's election there. Also, Joe Conason's Journal is a regular Salon political column that is almost always great. I can get stuff like this elsewhere, but, sadly not often from a place as "reputable" as Salon. If Salon disappears the pickings will be even slimmer and the Palasts and Conasons of the world will be even more marginalized.

    Investigative reporting costs tons of money, and even if Salon has the best of intentions, the bottom line will prevent them from doing lots of stories. Maybe we can use the slashdot effect to really make a difference, and not only save them, but give them the funds to actually improve. Our corporate government and out-of-control military-industrial complex need to keep the people blissfully ignorant in order to continue getting away with murder every day. Ownership of the media is their biggest weapon in this war against us, and so I've decided I can afford to pay $18.50 (or $30 with no ads) to try and save a dying breed. Who's with me?

    1. Re:I'm subscribing by mhackarbie · · Score: 1

      I am!

      --
      Building a better ribosome since 1997
  143. Re:woo!! I am the angel of internet publication de by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or you should wear a t-shirt that says "I'm Stupid".

  144. simple really by geoff+lane · · Score: 1

    Nobody finds reading an online magazine convienient. People will spend $300 a year on buying a daily newspaper and throwing it away. People will not buy a $300 subscription to an online magazine, no matter how good, because it doesn't feel like a good deal.

    This will all be fixed when, if, we get a decent cyberbook with a high quality A5 screen, low cost and open h/w and s/w architecture and the ability to store web magazines locally for offline reading away from a network connection.

  145. So what does Salon have to offer me!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being in opposition to the incumbent leading party does not require a swing to the extreme. It appears that Salon is far more to the left than readers might find attractive. It's not a surprise considering their home, the odd city of SF.

    If they had a click-thru to vote Salon off the stage, I bet they'd be closed doors by now. The abundance of its scripting talent does not impress much if use of common sense in their agenda is falling short.

    Bye, bye Salon! Happy to see you go!

  146. Content by Enocasiones · · Score: 1

    Someone has to write the articles and edit them. Then there's system administration. Salaries are probably their biggest fixed cost. Just guessing, but it makes sense.

    --
    Enoc
  147. Patent Pending by MiloTin · · Score: 1

    If you go to Ultramercial.com, you'd see a reference to "Patent Pending".

    I can't quite imagine this concept being patentable.

    Lets see..

    Show Ad.
    Reader clicks through Ad.
    Put cookie in browser.
    Check if cookie is valid for today, if true, show full article?

  148. a million for realestate by wiredog · · Score: 2

    You haven't looked at rental costs in San Francisco, have you?

    1. Re:a million for realestate by Mac+Degger · · Score: 2

      Just out of curiosity...was that a joke or is it really that 'ouch!' over on that side of the pond? I thought real estate was significantly cheaper (even in the cities)...

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
    2. Re:a million for realestate by wiredog · · Score: 2

      It's really that ouch. In some places. San Jose is very bad. The DC area (especially Northern Virginia, where I live) is insane. I make $60k/year and can't afford a house within a 45 minute commute of where I work. A one bedroom apartment, in a 40 year old building, is $900/Month.

  149. Re:Salon's losing money--- How could this happen?! by Surlyboi · · Score: 1

    1) write a bunch of whiny tripe attacking the most popular president in the last hundred years.

    Funny, I don't remember reading any articles
    attacking FDR on Salon...

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
  150. maybe it's their content by briancnorton · · Score: 1

    I dont know why nobody is willing to say that their content at best was a retread of "politically incorrect" and at worst smart people saying the same thing over and over. I read the site for some time, then I realized that I had already read everything. They have a wonderful collection of writers, but they all say the same thing, OVER AND OVER. Salon would have been better as a book. Bush Bashing and whining about being a wimp is only interesting for so long.

    --

    People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.

  151. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  152. Re:lern tu reed by ZeLonewolf · · Score: 2

    Communism is extreme economic control by the government, which is a far-left concept...whereas Fascism is extreme personal/social control by the government, which is a far-right concept. I thought that point was clear...

    --
    "If at first you don't succeed, lower your standards."
  153. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  154. Re:lern tu reed by ZeLonewolf · · Score: 2

    Outside of talk radio, which is typically conservative and uses the term "Communism" to refer to those of the far left, Commumism really isn't mentioned in the national press outside of reference to Communist and post-Communist nations.

    For example, Cuba and China are communist countries, and to a a degree proudly so... The last Fascist countries fell over 50 years ago (WWII axis nations)

    But anyhow...your original premise is that liberalism is thought of as a 'bad thing' in America, and the fact that Communism is thought to be an evil thing supports that fact; I would actually say it's more likely that the average uneducated Joe doesn't like Communism with far-leftism but rather with "evil" countries like China, Cuba, and the former Soviet bloc.

    Now, I've also heard the flip side...there are those that associate "conservative" and "Republican" with the whole right-wing religious wacko, ten commandments, creationist deal.

    I've also heard countless times from either side of the political spectrum claims that the major news outlets have a political bent to the opposite direction. While no one would doubt that radio is dominated by right-wingers, the print media seems to lean in whatever direction the local politics swing. For example, the Boston Globe or the Sacramento Bee most likely have a left-wing bent, whereas the Dallas Star-Telegram I would assume to have a right-wing bias.

    As far as the televised national media, well, I've heard the arguments from both sides, but I just don't see it. The national outlets spend so much time reporting on the actual news that there's little opportunity for bias...more news, less discussion of the news. I also suspect that if a national outlet began to develop a bias to one side, people would immediately begin to disregard it as such.

    So...I have to say that I'm of the opinion that there's no real swing in either direction over the term "liberal" or "conservative"...look at elections...each side accuses the other of being too liberal or too conservative as if the label is an insult...I think it's more true that the labels leave bad tastes in the mouths of those too far to the other side of the political spectrum.

    --
    "If at first you don't succeed, lower your standards."
  155. YOU FAIL IT by trolling4fun+profit · · Score: 1

    Step 1: First Post Step 2: ... Step 3: Profit Step 1: Not first post Step 2: ... Step 3: YOU FAIL IT!!

    --
    Step 1:- Troll Step 2:- Step 3:- Profit!
  156. That's OK,.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't remember anyone taking popularity polls before the 1950's. But FDR lost seats during his offyear elections, GWB didn't.

    Smoke that monkey boy.

    1. Re:That's OK,.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Voters were a helluva lot less apathetic back then
      too. Get your nose outta the shrub's ass and wise the fuck up.

  157. Re:CNN's conservative bias is almost as bad as Fox by Von+Rex · · Score: 1

    You must be a conservative, you showed that you have no ability to form a counter argument whatsoever.

    The bit about "twisting facts" to "distorted ends" rebutts itself in view of your previous posts. Go back to watching Rush, "geek".

  158. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    The net is like a vast sea of lutefisk with tiny dinosaur brains embedded
    in it here and there. Any given spoonful will likely have an IQ of 1, but
    occasional spoonfuls may have an IQ more than six times that!
    -- James 'Kibo' Parry

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...