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[personal profile] cahwyguy

userpic=observationsI was going to write today about some interesting historical things that have been forgotten, such as a Jewish Cemetery in East LA, or how forgotten gaming magazines such as the General are finding new life on the Internet. But instead, there’s a new issue nagging at me: Paywalls.

Those of you who remember my writing a few years ago remembered that I drew heavily from the New York Times. Today, I rarely cite the time, because they introduced a metered paywall. I thought about paying, but their rate of $3.99 a week was far too expensive when you added it up. You might note I cite the LA Times heavily even though they have a paywall. This is because I subscribe to the paper version of the LA Times, and that gives me digital access.

This week, word came about about more papers going to the paywall model. The San Francisco Chronicle has added a paywall; some, but not all, articles will be on SFGate. However, many of those will point to the full version behind the paywall. The Orange County Register is adding a complete paywall. The Sacramento Bee already has a paywall for some material. The San Diego U-T has a paywall.

Nationally, the Gannett papers have added paywalls (except USA Today, which they’ve redesigned to make unreadable). The Washington Post is adding a paywall. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch may add a paywall. The Chicago Tribune has a paywall. Expect it soon at your local regional paper, if it is of any size.

I understand why papers are doing this: the online advertising model is proving to be unworkable. To survive and be profitable, papers are doing what they can. However, I feel it is hurting the country. We are going back to a model where people will primarily get their news from a local, slanted, media voice (combined with bloggers who are not trained journalists). Before paywalls, one could read a number of different sources, draw a line down the middle, and determine a more unvarnished truth. That’s much harder.

Plus, it will be much harder to learn what is going on elsewhere in the country. USA Today was revolutionary in that they provided news for the entire country — yes, just one paragraph, but that was more local news than you often got. That’s getting much harder, although you can go to the sites for the local TV stations — but they don’t provide as much in-depth written reporting.

I’m sad to see the paywalls go up. I know it will certainly impact where I go for news.

Music: Elaine Stritch At Liberty (2002 Original Broadway Cast) (Elaine Stritch): “The Ladies Who Lunch”

This entry was originally posted on Observations Along The Road (on cahighways.org) as this entry by cahwyguy. Although you can comment on DW, please make comments on original post at the Wordpress blog using the link below; you can sign in with your LJ, FB, or a myriad of other accounts. There are currently comments on the Wordpress blog. PS: If you see share buttons above, note that they do not work outside of the Wordpress blog.

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