Slashdot Mirror


Paywalled NYT Now Has 300,000 Online Subscribers

An anonymous reader writes "It looks like the derided-on-slashdot paywall for the NY Times hasn't brought down the paper so far. The Times now reports 300,000 digital subscribers (to e-reader versions and the web combined) and digital advertising revenue for the part of the company that includes the paper has increased 6% this quarter."

9 of 179 comments (clear)

  1. It is a payrope by MLCT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It isn't a paywall, it is a payrope. You can just wander right over it (without any underhand tactics). I have been a reader before and after (5-10 articles per day) and have not noticed any difference. I don't know what the article cut-off is, but unless you plan to read the thing cover-to-cover every day you aren't going to notice. I suspect a lot of the 300k subscriptions come from ipads and kindles, because I can't see how it would be easy to get value for money from a PC subscription.

    Paywalls block all content, and are flawed (and are what the /. crowd say will fail). The NYT payrope is a sensible hybrid model, that finds enough people (willing or stupid depending on your prerogative) to pay, while the rest go free. Now if we get figures on The Times of London's subscriber figures (blanket solid paywall) then I suspect they would be a lot more in-keeping with the /. predictions.

  2. Re:Well... by flooey · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Keep in mind that every print subscriber gets a free top-of-the-line digital subscription. Its actually cheaper to get the paper edition and recycle it then it is to just get the online, in fact, which is annoyingly stupid.

    Stupid, but economically sensible given the environment. Print advertising rates are set based on circulation, so simply sending a paper to someone earns money for the Times, whether they read it or not. If you assume that (advertising income per paper subscriber) - (cost of printing a paper) > (web subscription cost) - (paper subscription cost), the Times makes more money when you sign up for the cheaper paper edition than when you sign up for online only.

  3. Re:More like highly left-wing audience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    You think "communism" is left-leaning? Maybe you mean Marxism. Or socialism. Or maybe you're throwing terms out there that you don't understand, like "reality" or "success". It's okay, no one knows the difference anyway. All forms of anything except the perfect "free market" that exists perfectly in reality (has always existed, and will always exist) are pinko claptrap schemes that have no value.

    Carry on.

  4. Re:probably by Tyler+Eaves · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Real news coverage is about depth much more than timeliness. I'd much rather have in-depth analysis of say, a proposed law, in a week or two than fluff in 6 hours.

    --
    TODO: Something witty here...
  5. Good grief. by cornface · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nobody on slashdot would care about stupid paywall sites if you would do the most basic of editing tasks and stop linking to them.

  6. Re:probably by Anomalyst · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I got it for free on my ipad

    No, you didn't. It was paid for by the outrageous markup you turned your head and coughed up for having PHB decide what you can and cannot run on hardware for which you were way overcharged.

    --
    There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
  7. Re:More like highly left-wing audience by Galactic+Dominator · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Really? Next I suppose you'll tell me Fascism is also some form of Leftism plot and the entire right-wing Christian coalition bringing it along were actually disguised liberals there to give the extreme conservatives a bad name. Let's be morally serious here and objectively assess the evidence. I would hope Coulter/McCarthy-like liberal paranoia could be reserved for a less educated audience where it can prey on ignorance and illusory superiority to gain popularity.

    --
    brandelf -t FreeBSD /brain
  8. Re:this just in! by AndyAndyAndyAndy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    +5 "Interesting" is how it's supposed to go for things like that. Remember, there's no +1 Agree / -1 Disagree. I'd say that mod was right on-target. Interesting thoughts that turned out to be wrong. They're still wrong, but they're still interesting.

    --
    It's always confirmation bias!
  9. Re:probably by Kagura · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Then you want to read The Economist. Look around for a few minutes and be impressed that such a high-level newspaper exists. Despite its name, it does not deal with mostly economics. It's more for international politics and major world events.