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Turning Up The Heat On On-Line Registration

Saeed al-Sahaf writes "CNN is running a story on the growing number of print newspapers with on-line editions that are requiring registration. Apparently there are some folks out there who don't like this 'feature'! I found a few things interesting about the story: Privacy groups say it's a dangerous practice and promotes spam; I didn't realize people put real personal info into these things (110-year-old surgeons from Bulgaria named Mickey Mouse). About 15 to 20 percent of the registrations for the Philadelphia Inquirer turned out to be bogus, a figure that was much lower than I would have thought. Also mentioned in the story is a web site called BugMeNot.com, which lists 'communal' logins and passwords for on-line newspapers."

22 of 464 comments (clear)

  1. BugMeNot days numbered? by Insomnia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Of course, now that BugMeNot has been publicized, how long until all these sites check that site often and just disable all accounts that ever get listed there?

    1. Re:BugMeNot days numbered? by epine · · Score: 4, Insightful


      That was a great post. Wow, it would be cool to hang out on a forum where that kind of post was typical, rather than exceptional. Cool for us dorks, in any case.

      I don't agree that 99% of logins are accurate. Perhaps 99% of logins are plausible. While I don't believe that *everyone* falsifies logins, I've made my own best effort to pick up the slack, and I know plenty of people who aren't slashdorks who put their correct address on their VISA card application with some reluctance.

      What I would give out freely is my GPS coordinate, to single degree precision, which is sufficient to place me within a mild climate of the Pacific Northwest: bring on the ads for lattes, gortex jackets, and hiking boots.

      What I find distressing about the cold math of that post is the extent to which advertising has become an unchallenged assumption of American society. Newspapers will change, but ads must go on.

      Why don't we simplify the process? For $5000 cash I'll volunteer to stick my head into a souped up MRI machine, have all my emotional associations reprogrammed by powerful American corporate interests, spend the rest of my life buying overpriced products with marginal performance (but I'll feel *sooo* good about it due to the emotional reprogramming I'll never notice), and be able to sit in front of the television for an hour and watch an hour worth of programming (no more ads for me, because these were inserted medically, on a one-shot basis). If every 30 seconds I spend in the MRI having my emotions rewired saves me from watching the same ad for Gap Khakis 300 times, I'll count the time well spent, even if my emotional reprogramming forces me to wear Gap Khakis until I'm incontinent.

      If advertising wasn't possible, if some immunity sprung up in the human genetic condition to thwart the imprinting of emotional desires through the images and sounds of desirability, then the media industry would have to be based entirely on paid content. I could live with that. It would lead to better content. For instance, $100 million dollar that have be sprayed on Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan could have been spent instead on writing some scripts worth producing (a chorus of Sopranos on every channel).

      I'm looking forward to the day when a typical home PC can animate virtual supermodels on demand to model any aspect of daily living. Say for instance I like Tsarist stout (I do), I could on my home PC create sequences of virtual supermodels having virtual supermodel fun while cavorting around with thick mugs of Tsarist stout of a brand of my own choosing. Amazing! I could reprogram my own emotions to feel cool about drinking the beer I actually like!
      Wouldn't that be amazing ... to feel cool and *like* the beer you are drinking at the same time?

      No, wait, it wouldn't work. The point is, when I spend $10,000 too much for a carbon spewing SUV, part of what I'm paying for is the secure knowledge that my friends and neighbours have all been exposed to hours worth of emotional conditioning to regard me as being as cool as my wheels. Without advertising, we wouldn't know what the products around us symbolize, and we might have difficulty figuring out which of our neighbours is rich, cool, or sexy. Damn, it can be so difficult figuring out who is sexy and who isn't without the massively socialized product cues. I guess we'll have to keep advertising after all.

  2. Alternatives easy to find by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I live in Austin. I used to read the Statesman online, but now they require registrations, and the damn thing asks for the password every single time.

    So, I read www.kxan.com instead. I think that no matter where I turn, I can find an equivalent article from a competitor. Even content such as what salon.com carries can be found elsewhere. Slate.com and theatlantic.com can give me lots to think about when salon.com's advertisements fail to run on Linux.

    So, no biggie. If they make it easy for me, I'm content to set myself up as a 99 year old woman from Ahzerbaijahn. But if they bug me twice about it, or if they fail to test their advertizing/authentication scheme with the browser that I choose to use, then I'll never visit their shithole again.

    So long, Austin American Statesman. You suck!

    --
    Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  3. They WANT you to enter bogus info... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just a theory, of course, but I bet the newspapers could care less what info. you use to register, as long as you do. And if you register with a new name every time, even better-- that's twice the number of readers they can claim to have to their advertisers.

  4. It's not 10%-15% of ALL registration information.. by Granos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They found that 10-15% of email addresses are bogus. This makes perfect sense, because most users who register probably figure that they need to recieve an e-mail to confirm registration, (even if you don't, as in the case of the Philadelphia Inquirer). If you look at Name/address/phone number/other personal info, then the amount of falsified data is probably at 85%+. Of course, there's no way to run a database queue to find out how much of that is fake, since they can't just count bounced e-mails. But to the companies e-mail is really all that matters anyway, so the fact that the other info is fake is moot.

  5. Amazing business practice by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Either make your site pay only or make it free. Putting up the registration has to be the worst. They admit that 20% of the email addresses is false. However this is easy to check. Checking the rest of the data is not so easy. So in effect it is totally useless.

    No sane advertiser will pay for a spot based on research data where such an easily checked piece of data is already proven to be false 1 out of 5 times. Income, job, interest are then likely to have a far higher error rate.

    I do know that newspapers have to make money and that giving their content away for free does not make too much sense. But this doesn't make sense either.

    If they want to get info let them start with basic geographic data. Don't show someone with a european IP ads for america only products. Surely that shouldn't be that hard?

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  6. Why pay? by WenisMonger · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I understand that some people may be particularly attached to certain columnists or sections in their favorite newspapers and would want to pay for the convienence of an online version. But overall I see no real reason to even bother with a paid subscription to news that can be found for free somewhere else.

    The internet is a huge resource of information, and if people are uncomfortable or feel that their privacy has been infringed by being asked personal information, there are plenty of other sites that carry the same news.

    Demographic information is a very valuable resource, but only if accurate information is submitted. But for now, there's no stopping those who value privacy from posting bogus info.

  7. fake reg by RTPMatt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    bout 15 to 20 percent of the registrations for the Philadelphia Inquirer turned out to be bogus, a figure that was much lower than I would have thought.

    I thought the same thing, but almost every time i ask a nontech-savvy person, they tell me they put their real info in. Also, many of these people will also put your email in to those 'send this to 5 friends for $1 off!' type deals. I have had to teach everybody in my family that when you do things like this it adds to spam. Some of them seem to think that its wrong to give fake information, or that you may be tracked down or something. people need to be educated about this stuff!

  8. Re:get over it by sylvester · · Score: 3, Insightful
    It's more a matter that there is no point them having my details. What do they gain?
    That's not your call to make, it's theirs. Obviously you're free to stop reading if you don't want to give details, but I don't think that makes bogus detais/bogus accounts any more ethical.

    With great timeliness, the Globe and Mail (Canada) just started asking for a registration today. But it seemed to only ask for the polls. So then they also gain email-verified poll results.

    The G&M is pretty well-respected, and it seems likely that their web-polls were getting spammed by political operatives, since they've been running many about the upcoming Federal election.

    Bogus details is like pirating shareware. It isn't hard, it isn't murder, but it isn't right, either.

    Of course, it depends somewhat on what kind of privacy protections your country has, and what data they ask for. I don't like giving out salary data. The G&M only asked for a postal code.

    -Rob
  9. strong privacy policy? by tuxette · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Mann said in an e-mail that the complaints generally fell into three categories: People who had technical problems, those who objected to giving out personal information, and those who "railed that we were pigs and were 'ruining the Internet!"'

    "We helped the first group through it. We reassured most all of the second group with a strong privacy policy. The third group still doesn't like it and I presume many of them did not register with us," he said.

    It seems like everyone likes to say that they have a strong privacy policy, but it is often the case that the claim of a strong privacy policy is just a bunch of reassuring words with no basis in reality (remember Toysmart? And from what I understand, not much has happened regarding attempts to create legislation.). As long as there are no laws in the US that regulate the use of personal data that are comperable to the laws in Europe, these newspapers could pretty much do whatever they want to with the data.

    Now fine, I understand that these newspapers need to get advertisers' money in order to survive. But why not be straightforward about it? For example, if they asked readers to do anonymous surveys in order to help their advertisers, they would probably get far more favorable response than this register-all-your-personal-data-so-we-can-lie-to-y ou-about-not-selling-it-to advertisers bullshit they're doing now.

    --
    People say I'm crazy, I got diamonds on the soles of my shoes...
    1. Re:strong privacy policy? by anubi · · Score: 4, Insightful
      "Strong Privacy Policy"... Bah! Humbug!

      I get these things from my bank all the time, neatly enclosed with all sorts of other advertisement flyers in my credit card statement.

      It miffs me off everytime I read one. Its the couchy language they use.. like "only sharing personal information as permitted by law."

      What I want to see is the word required by law.

      How do you feel they would think if I told them I would haxor their system as permitted by law to verify confidentiality of my personal information, especially after its been shown how the RIAA can apparently use similar techniques to verify misuse of their copyrighted information.

      Its obvious that that piece of paper they sent me is just to fulfull some legal requirement that says they must inform me that they are going to share my information, but in order to mislead me, they couch it in "businessese" lingo to make it look like they are only going to violate my trust if they have to. But that's not what they actually say at all!

      I just try to limit my exposure by doing business with as few of these guys as possible.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

    2. Re:strong privacy policy? by timpaton · · Score: 3, Insightful
      We reassured most all of the second group with a strong privacy policy

      Of course they have a strong privacy policy. They keep their list of subscriber addresses very secure.

      After all, if the list was publically available, it wouldn't be worth anything when they wanted to sell it!

  10. Not registrations, email addressees... by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The actual quote was:

    The Philadelphia Inquirer started online registration in March, asking readers for e-mail, home address, gender and birth date. About 10 percent to 15 percent of the 300,000 registrations to date have bad e-mail addresses, said Fred Mann, general manager of Philly.com.

    Just because an email address will accept mail does not mean the rest of the information is accurate in any way. I have a few junk-dropper email addresses that I'll point these things to in case there is something it might send that I would need (like a password). But the rest of the information can be totally false...

    So the real amount of bad data may be closer to the number you were thinking of in the first place (I'd guess 30-40% bogus registrations myself).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  11. Re:The day they started subscriptions... by dave1791 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ummmm... Why do people bitch about the beer not being free?

    What is the big deal? The washington post, nyt, etc are comercial operations and have to pay to keep the lights on. You can pay to read the newspaper in print or read it online for free provided you give them something in trade (i.e. account info).

    They have to pay those journalists and pay for the Reuters/AP feeds. If you want to read their stuff, be prepared to trade for it. $/ or info.

    If you want free beer, there are a million crappy blogs...

  12. Re:get over it by mabinogi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, how much information they want is not your call to make , it's definitely theirs.

    But it is entirely your call whether or not to give that information, or forego the use of their service.

    They all know damned well that just becase they ask for information doesn't mean they'll get it. They're also probably aware that their readership will go down proportional to how much information they want, so they make a judgement as to how valuable that information is to them.
    You make that same judgement....

    Also, the parent was not equating incorrect information with piracy, he was comparing...there is a big difference. His comparison was not entirely without merit. You can choose to ignore the nag screens on Shareware, and continue using it for free, just as you can enter false data in the registration pages of a service, therefore getting it for free. In both cases the providers of the software or the service are aware that this will happen, and are counting on enough people to be honest to make it worthwhile. But being one of the expected dishonest people does not make you any less dishonest....

    --
    Advanced users are users too!
  13. Re:The day they started subscriptions... by miu · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Simple - if you want to read someone's content you abide by their rules.

    Right, and he made the statement that he would not read their content as he doesn't like their rules.

    The real problem here is that some sites are more professional about the whole privacy issue than others. Some, like the NYT seem to be very good. Other sites have been a huge mistake to sign up for, IT industry rags seem to be the absolute worst - I never sign up for those anymore with anything other than a disposable webmail account.

    I'd like to see a useful accreditation for a site's privacy policy. As it stands right now a site with a good policy can change pretty much at the whim of the owners. Even a site that sincerely swears on a stack of bibles that they will never sell your info is subject to being sold to weasels who will bury you in spam.

    --

    [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
  14. Though the reverse is also true... by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...people generating the audience know all too well about falsified sales figures. "Oh sorry your 100,000 clicks barely produced sales, here's a nickle for your trouble".

    That's why they've mostly agreed on clicks as the "currency" of choice, since both can verify the number of clicks. Then the advertiser can look at his click-to-sales ratio and decide if it's worth it. Of course, this leads to the nefarious practice of redirecting innocents because they generate clicks.

    Going by sales is better all around, particularly for the consumer, but it also requires a considerable higher level of trust between the companies involved.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  15. Rights gone too far by nuggz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry, this is just too much. Not everything is a right or discrimination.

    Yes men should be allowed to view female targetted ads.

    Realistically companies target their advertising to the intended customer. This isn't a violation of your rights. They just wanted to target a different group.

    You would be wasting time selling Maybachs in trailer parks, so don't bother trying.

  16. Yep, It works by bugmenot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Got this username/password from bugmenot.com. Too bad I won't actually get any Karma if this comment should be modded up.

    --
    This account has been seized by the GNAA. That is all.
  17. Re:The day they started subscriptions... by cgenman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Except that those sites are ad-supported. There is already a tradeoff going on there... You're trading eyeballs for info. That's not very risky. The thing about online registration is that you're trading a lot of safety for not much info. True, they could be nice and not spam your inbox, spam your house, clog up your phone with marketing calls... Maybe their tracking info doesn't monitor your entrances to aljazeer.net, or your propensity towards reading Palestenian sympathetic diatribes (Remember, everyone in the US government just bowed down and kissed the dead feet of a notoriously bad McCarthyist). They'd never hand that info over to someone who would misuse it. And OK, so they're running a system well and would never be hacked. But why take that risk?

    What the free papers are offering are a large risk in exchange for not much reward, a risk that you wouldn't be asked to take if you were reading the dead tree edition. Would you read a newspaper if the newsstand man required a valid drivers license, and watched over your shoulder taking notes?

    As what many people consider the only remaining viable source of information in this country, newspapers have a unique responsibility to the democracy. Just as voting is annonymous, so too must be information-gathering. Give that up, and who knows when the next witch hunt will find you...

  18. Re:The day they started subscriptions... by digitalgiblet · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Cgenman said: "Would you read a newspaper if the newsstand man required a valid drivers license, and watched over your shoulder taking notes?"

    When you get the newspaper at the newstand you PAY for it with MONEY. The bulk of that cost goes to defray the cost of printing. A major daily paper has HUGE expenses that keep going up, yet they don't raise the price of a paper very frequently.

    The profits from a newspaper come from advertisers who are willing to pay a fair rate for print advertising because it works. So far most online advertising has failed to meet the expectations of advertisers, so they don't want to pay much for it.

    Newspapers know that the world is changing around them and they are trying to adapt. Are they making the right choices? Don't know. I don't like registering any more than anyone else, but I do know that if newspapers don't figure out how to make a LOT more money online, they will cease to exist. The trend is for anyone younger than say 45-50 to get their news online rather than from print. The good news is that it costs a LOT less to publish online (newsprint costs are soaring -- newsprint is the paper itself). The bad news is that the BULK of the jobs at a large daily paper are NOT reporters and editors, but printers and circulation people. That equals a ton of lost jobs in the future if newspapers go totally online.

    We're coming up on 10 years of large numbers of people actively using the Internet and we STILL haven't figured out a way to exchange money for information that people are willing to use that will generate enough money to make it worthwhile to provide that information. Yes I'm a capitalist. Yes I expect people provide goods and services only in exchange for SOMETHING that can be equated to money.

    It is basically a paradox. People pay for Internet service, so they figure everything out there should already be paid for, yet if you required ISPs to pay into a fund that was distributed amongst all web sites and services, each site would make microscopic revenues and would cease to operate.

  19. What's the big deal with registration by Pedrito · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People here are always complaining about registering to read news. All those jokes about giving your first born child to the New York Times. Yeah, they're funny, but let's be serious for a moment.

    First of all, the New York Times is a FOR PROFIT company. Second of all, they have employees to pay so that their employees can then eat and feed their families. They offer their service for free. All they ask in return is that you provide some information so that they can target ads. Is that so much to ask for? Would you rather just lay out cash?

    Frankly, I was more than happy to provide the NYT with real registration information. I use their service and I'm very happy that they provide it for free. I'd be pretty upset if they had to start charging for it because everyone was sharing registrations or providing false information.

    Complain about it all you want, but I think it's a very small price to pay. I registered years ago with correct information and to date, they have not sucked my checking account dry, trashed my computer, or done anything else sinister with the information that I'm aware of.

    Too many people in the online community feel they're entitled to get stuff for free, but you have to remember that there are people behind the scenes, real people, with jobs that need to feed their families.

    I'm personally very thankful that so many news sites do offer their stories for free.