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Annual Fee For Your Comment?

CaptainThunderbolt writes "Imagine this: you read an interesting story on Slashdot and you have a comment to make, so you login only to be greeted with a message saying you will need to pay a fee in order to make your comment. Seems ridiculous, doesn't it? Why on earth would you pay just to make a comment? Well, that is exactly how thousands of Aussies feel right now. AtomicMPC is an Australian PC Magazine with a fiercely loyal readership and an equally loyal online community. Yesterday it was announced that access to the most popular sections of the forum will soon attract a $20/year fee unless you are a magazine subscriber or a high-ranking forum member. The reaction to this announcement triggered the most vicious backlash I have ever witnessed as the website feedback forum went beserk. Users baulked at the idea of having to pay to access a community which the feel they are responsible for creating and I must say I understand how they feel. Is this a trend I should worry about? Will I one day have to pay a membership fee to access other popular forums?"

23 of 553 comments (clear)

  1. Hurry it up /. by Xuranova · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Please start charging to post as soon as you can. Then just maybe people will actually read other people's posts before posting the exact same thing over and over.

    --
    "There is no real right or wrong, just what the majority accepts at the time."
  2. Straight Dope MB by SeanDuggan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The Straight Dope Message Board has gone to a subscriber-only setup. I no longer post there. This is a particularly interesting move given that Cyril still states in the Ask a Question submittal form that one should start by posting to the MB. I'm definitely not commenting on the columns anymore even if there are errors. (Which I sometimes wonder was why they implemented subscriptions...)

    --
    This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
  3. Alternate Proposal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They should use a Slashdot-like-moderation-system, the rules would be as follows:

    * If someone gets modded +5 Insightful or Interesting within a day, it's on us, because we're nice like that.
    * If you get modded overrated you owe us a buck.
    * If you get modded redundant, that's two dollars

    Now here's the catch, so pay attention:

    The first time you get modded troll you pay five dollars, the second time you pay five dollars AND you start with a -1 rating from then on, the THIRD time you pay five dollars, and CowboyNeal (or whoever the Australian equivalent is) comes over to your place and beats you with a baseball bat for 5 minutes.

    As for getting modded +5 funny, well you don't really want to know what happens when you get modded +5 (it's bad, but not as bad as what the grammar nazis will do to you), so please moderate this post accordingly.

  4. Scientific Publishing by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Right now, one of the "big ideas" in the scientific journal biz is "pay to publish" - since restricting electronic distribution is an obviously stupid thing, the industry is scrambling to think of something.

    A lot of people there seem to think it makes sense for the author of the paper being published to pay for the publication costs himself - the argument is that the fees can just be folded into the researcher's grant proposal and so won't have much of a negative effect.

    I personally think that idea is very stupid, and I hope that as the Aussies have rebeled so does the scientific community. The people who benefit from the work should be the ones to pay for it in some fashion or another.

    For example the aussies ought to look at a peer-reviewed system where comment posters get discounted to free access while lurkers have to pay "full" price (note the peer-review to insure bogus posts don't flood the system just for free access, peer-reviewing would also qualify for discountage).

    For the journals, I think the "lurkers" ought to pay too - the university libraries and corporations that currently pay for subscriptions should continue to pay, in advance. As long as enough groups pay in advance to fund the journal's operations, the results would be free to all. If not enough groups are willing to buy subscriptions, then the journal should either close down and give all the money back, or operate on a smaller budget with a smaller number of articles published.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  5. Re:SomethingAwful proves it works by zorander · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was going to comment to say basically this. Yeah, SA attracts some 'unique' characters. You could say it's tasteless and unsavory, but it doesn't have trolls (that last), jokes/catch phrases don't get beaten into the ground (since using one that's been deemed 'old' will get you probation or a banning), and people generally don't talk in AOLspeak.

    There's a sense of cameraderie there and the forums are much more close-knit than say slashdot, where I seldom remember another poster by name. Because you stand to lose something real (your right to post or 10 dollars), you're more likely to behave, contribute, and get something out of the forum.

    All in all, I'd say that this is a good move. SA did this several years ago. When they moved to the payment system from being a free forum, users who didn't post comments lost their accounts and contributors kept them. This makes sense more in light of the 'one-time cost' model than a subscription one (a subscription for life saves you much more than $10 in the long run and is much more a liability to the owner). I know people who lost their accounts then. Years later, they don't care. Most of them payed the $10 and kept on lurking. If anyone was bitter, it didn't kill the forum.

    Now if we could only figure out how to keep these annoying as fuck highschoolers out...then we'd really have it figured out.

  6. You forgot 6.) by SupaZeph · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You don't pay, but actually spend your time in meaningful, troll free discussion areas, like Tech Talk, etc., which will remain free to access.

  7. View Askew boards by JayBees · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't know about the Atomic boards specifically, but in general, charging money for forum access keeps out the riff raff (read: trolls, spammers, etc.), and this is a good thing.

    Slashdot's discussions do okay because of the moderation system, despite its flaws. But ever read an unmoderated discussion on say...Ain't It Cool News? Read their Talk Backs for 10 seconds and you'll wish you still had a CRT monitor so that you could punch through it and end your painful existence.

    By charging for access, you keep out the riff raff.

    The ViewAskew.com boards (View Askew is Kevin Smith's production company), among others, has been doing something similar for a while now. To register on the View Askew boards you need to pay 2 bucks. It's a low fee, and it all goes to a rape/incest survivor charity, because, after all, Smith isn't trying to make a profit from this registration...the money is really just a gate keeping mechanism. $2 is low enough to not be prohibitive for legitimate users, but high enough to keep out the idiots.

  8. IGN has had this for years... by BTWR · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Sure, they have a few free forums, but 95% of them, and the only ones I use (the Gamecube boards) are $20/year (equal to most annual magazine subscriptions).

    I get SO much pre-info from those pages that it is SO worth it for me. I wonder if perhaps the nominal fee keeps the trolls at bay (sorta, we get a few "Gamecube is TEH GHEI!!! XBOX RULES!!11!!" losers), and there are few people w/multiple ids ($40/year is pushing it). But I guess if it used to be free and now isn't, i can understand their frustration...

  9. Re:Umm, Something Awful? by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While I would never, ever pay for a SA forum membership, I enjoy paying for the far more prestigious "TotalFark" membership :)

    N.

    --
    "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
  10. Cecil, not Cyril by emarkp · · Score: 2, Interesting
    And yes, the quality of the boards went sharply downhill when "pay to post" was enacted (though, to be fair, that was also due to the partisan screeching about Iraq and the 2004 election). There was quite the debate about it, especially since the administrators don't seem to care about improving the quality of the forums or avoiding attrition. The biggest argument against it was that if you make the people who generate the content pay, you're shooting yourself in the foot.

    There were even comments by admins that if people left because it cost to post, it would decrease the server load and that would be okay.

    I let my membership expire this week, and haven't really cared.

  11. Re:Um, OK. by yagu · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Slashdot makes money. Not as much as they might like, but... well, I have the same issue. They're here. I'm here. That is not some proof that God Loves Slashdot, but it is a nice reminder that services that serve are, well, useful enough to pay their own way.

    I hope so, but I don't know so. Maybe you know something I don't. Sometimes services are provided in the hope and belief that, though they start out losing money, they are good enough and valuable enough, and yes, maybe even get enough God Love, they will prevail. In that light some eventually reassess, and go away because they just can't afford to provide the service anymore, and others decide to charge so they can continue to offer the service... hoping the "served" agree the service is valuable enough to pay for to continue to receive. I just don't know where various forums stack up in this continuum.

    I HOPE slashdot is profitable and continues to offer "this" for free, but I still consider it a valuable enough service in my world I'd pay some fee to sustain that service.

  12. Re:If you don't like it go elsewhere by SacrificialNewt · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've been an Atomic forum goer for nearly 3 years. I have a post count of around 6300. I have also been a subscriber at times. I think I'll end up paying despite the fact that I think it's wrong to charge us. This is down to the Atomic Community itself. I attend several Atomic events a year and consider these people my friends. Like the first thread said...we are fiercely loyal and out of the seven hundred people who have posted in Atomic since yesterday, only 30 or so are leaving. I bet some may even be back. Still, it's a pity because I respect some of those leaving and their reasons for doing so. Now where did I leave a spare $20?

  13. Re:Social Contract by AoT · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So can we alter adblocker so it pretends to click on all the links?

  14. Re:Let Capitalism run its course. by Kineel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    After all, Capitalism is the best, right?

    Good point, yes it is. Free Market systems will choose the best course. Naturally, a website cannot simply sit around making no money and expect to continue providing content.

    The real problem is the people who have come to expect a "free as in I'm too cheap to pay" community on the web. Of course, I guess we could just ask the government to entitle us with "free as in payed by taxpayers who are too stupid to notice the rising taxes" web services.

    --
    -- Should there be smoke coming out of my CPU?
  15. Re:Umm, Something Awful? by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The big problem with webforums is the amount of people who just like to make trouble.

    Depends on the forum, though. I would agree that there is a large degree of abuse at Slashdot, which is targeted at a wide range of audiences, but other less general forums (fora?) such as, for instance, Dropline's have remained pretty civilised and consequently useful.

  16. Re:Hey, Subscribers! by Daengbo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The forums for Kevin Smith's website, View Askew, does this (though the fee is a mnimal $2 for eternal membership.

    In his case, I understand it, because he practically made a whole movie devoted to people bashing his movies (Jay and Silent Bob). The internet has given everyone a voice, and everyone has chosen to use that voice to bitch about movies. Better, the internet is a place where people can go to download porn and talk about movies. I think he's just defending himself from the AC.

  17. Re:So what? by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    1.) They are asking already loyal members to suddenly pay for something they've always gotten for free before.

    So what? Those "loyal members" don't own the equipment and don't pay for the bandwidth. Loyalty doesn't mean jackshit if you're the guy that has to pay the bills.

    2.) Those of us who have been around the Internet for a while remember when the whole purpose of the thing was the free exchange of information.

    Big - fucking - deal. I remember those days, too; they weren't nearly as entertaining as they are now. In any event, refer to my previous point. Those "sections of the internet" are owned by someone *who isn't you*.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  18. Re:Only if...everything remains the same but diff by Quirk · · Score: 4, Interesting
    IIRC first posts were first mentioned by CmdTaco in a now deleted post to the FAQ on how /. came to be. In that post he spoke of a time when geeks would aimlessly scribble First Post in the sand. The FAQ now mentions First Posts as... ""First Post" comments are one of those odd little memetic hiccups that come out of nowhere and run amok. Basically, people with altogether far too much spare time sit and reload Slashdot, hoping that they will get the "First Post" in a discussion. This is one of those things that the moderation system was designed to clean up, and for the most part, it works. "First Post" comments usually get moderated down as off-topic almost instantly." Hey times change shit happens. I still try for a First Post, when logged in, cuz it's fun.

    What I don't get is why, when the moderation system and filters available allow for you to screen for almost anything, people seem to read a -1 then rant about First Posts and trolls, but hey, that's just me.

    I'm a /. fanboy, I like /. warts and all. I see it as a the net's agora. Like any open gathering place you should take what you value with a grain of salt, until you've been able to substantiate it. Reading /. at +4 gives results equal to the best techno sites, but it's up to the reader to validate the information.

    I liked /. best before it was sold, but think, that to date, it was at it's best about 3 years ago when the post grad ratio was at it's highest and the best and the brightest seemed to post. But again that's just me; I don't subscribe, not because I don't want to support /., but because I get alot of value out of the ads and think they're germane.

    cheers

    --
    "Academicians are more likely to share each other's toothbrush than each other's nomenclature."
    Cohen
  19. Re:It's not even just a matter of money by Monkelectric · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Reminds me exactly of planescape. Its an "open source" role playing game. I am a programmer by day and compser by night. They were looking for composers, I thought it would be a lot of fun...

    Long story short, the *CODE* for the RPG was all GPL, but all the game content, was curiously licensced under the planeshift license, which was bascially, "we o3n jou!" I started asking people, hey, why shoudl I as a musician assign my copyrights to you again? Why do you need that in an open source game? The were bullheaded and said basically "thats how it is."

    Like a year later it leaked that the top brass had secret plans to sell the game all along, and were basically harnessing open source enthusiasts and naieve artists/musicians/writers to develop a proprietary game for them. I confronted one of them about it and all they had to say in their defense was "we never said we WEREN'T going to sell it."

    --

    Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

  20. Beware: with fees comes responsibility by beforewisdom · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think that once money changes hands that formal terms of service...with concomitant legalities, will follow.

    If someone implements a subscription system on their forum they had better be ready for professional and mature management.

    They risk losing customers otherwise and possibly even risk legal headaches from people who are not content to simply cancel their subscription and move on.

    There will be less room for the inconsistent and sophomoric forum management often seen on the web.

    When people pay, they expect more.

    The original poster mentioned that the forum members in the article were angry because they felt that they contributed to building the community for which they are now being told to pay for.

    Healthy on line communities often happen by accident.

    It takes a different set of skills to throw a successful party then it does to set up an internet forum.

    There is no shortage of empty web boards, abandoned email lists, unused Usenet groups and forgotten IRC channels.

    A person looking to implement a subscription based forum should be sure of his/her social skills and ability to intentionally create ( or at least maintain ) a successful social environment.

    S/he may have to start one (over) from scratch if people chose to leave ( or not come ),

    If a forum owner has these skills then s/he has something to offer in exchange for charging a fee where other forums owners with the same I.T. skills do not.

    Any technically skilled person can set up a web board, an email list or an IRC channel. However very few people who can do these things also know how to create a successful social environment.

    If someone wants to charge a fee for a forum s/he should be aware that if s/he only has I.T. skills then she will have a huge number of competitors...and a huge number of free competitors to deal with.

  21. No it doesn't keep the riff raff out by FreeUser · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Like a $20 cover charge at a bar...it keeps the riff-raff out.

    No, it doesn't. You assume that the "riff raff" is either poor or too tight to spend a little money for the privelege of harrassing their target forum. You also assume the same for bars and nightclubs.

    In both cases that assumption is incorrect.

    There are plenty of well-to-do jerks and "riff-raff", and plenty of excellent people of modest or little means, so while you may be creating a little club based on the exclusivity of daddy's wealth, you are not inherently enhancing dialogue, intellect, or ethics by using a financial filter. In fact, arguably, you're doing the opposite.

    One thing is certain, you're losing a lot more interesting, worthwhile people than you are jerks when you start levying a cover charge for a discussion forum. This sort of thing reinforces the need to resurrect USENET (with decent SPAM filtering).

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  22. Re:It's not even just a matter of money by acraigps · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not sure where to even to begin here. First the name is PlaneShift not planescape. Second the content is licensed under a different license because it offers both the team and the person some protection. If somebody later on decides 'I don't want that model in game anymore' then we are screwed. Many artists want their stuff not opensource so they can control how it is used. I suppose you think that if I write a book with OpenOffice I should have to give that away for free as well? As for the last stuff I hope by 'brass' you mean the sink or something. What you claim has *never* been the policy and nobody from the team has ever said anything like that.

  23. Re:It's not even just a matter of money by Monkelectric · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I respect your opinion but Im sticking with my story :) And yes I realize I bunged the name and I do mean planeshift. When I offered to give them an irrevokable license to use my music -- but allow me to keep the copyright, they still found that unacceptable. I really think they're up to some funny business.

    --

    Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley