Please Note: This is an excert of an email I subscribe to. I post it here for discussion given the recent 'brew ha-ha over the rumor about Battle Clinic.Are You Ready to Pay for Each Site You Visit on the Internet?Well, some folks think (or hope) that's just what we'll be doing in a few years. According to Barry Diller, who runs an interactive services company, it's inevitable. He said in a recent keynote speech that the Internet will "absolutely" become a paid content system within the next five years. You can read more about what he has to say at
http://www.wxpnews.com/G8KIWD/090616-Internet-in-5-YearsI'm not so sure about that. After all, "information wants to be free" is the battle cry of the generation that grew up with Internet connectivity. The original quote wasn't quite as straightforward (It included the line "On the one hand information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable. On the other hand ...") but the expression has been adopted as the motto of open source advocates and those who believe there should be no copyright laws. And there are a very large number of those people out there.
Note that Diller isn't talking about the cost of Internet access (which some believe should be "free," i.e. government subsidized). He's talking about having Internet users pay to access specific sites and services, on top of what they pay for the 'Net access itself. There are, of course, already some sites that use this model. The online Wall Street Journal and some other online newspapers require a subscription to view their "premium" content. Users have to pay to get into online dating services and "adult content" web sites. Information services such as Nexus-Lexus have a long history of charging for access. TechRepublic has a "Pro" membership level that costs $99/year and provides content for IT professionals beyond what's available on their free site:
http://www.wxpnews.com/G8KIWD/090616-TechRepublic-ProBut just a couple of years ago, pundits were announcing that subscription-based web content was a "dying practice." That was the year the New York Times stopped charging site visitors and went to an advertising-based revenue model instead, and many other news sites followed suit:
http://www.wxpnews.com/G8KIWD/090616-A-Dying-PracticeNow the tide appears to be turning back in the other direction. The Frankfort Times put out the word this week that readers who don't subscribe to home delivery will lose access to free local online content on June 29th. They'll have to pay $20/month, which adds up to $230/year.
http://www.wxpnews.com/G8KIWD/090616-fTimesWill folks who are used to reading the news without paying bite the bullet and subscribe - or will they just get their news someplace else? I'm guessing the Times may be in for a disappointment if they're counting on a lot of revenue from web subscriptions. I read my local newspaper, the Dallas Morning News, online. If I had to pay $20/month to do so, I would most likely just watch the nightly news on my local TV station instead. That's definitely the case if the online newspaper continued to have the same annoying, intrusive ads that it has now (and which I put up with because I figure that's the price you pay for "free" content). Here's an example of what I'm talking about:
http://www.wxpnews.com/G8KIWD/090616-Web-AdvertisingOn the other hand, there is content that I do willingly pay for. I've bought songs from Amazon (why Amazon? In a nutshell: no DRM). I've rented movies from Unbox. I've subscribed to the WSJ (a subscription gets you both the print edition and online access). I've subscribed to tech magazines for their online content. But I'm pretty picky about what content I'll pay for. There are many sites I routinely visit that I would give up if they started charging for entry.
Those who advocate making the Internet all (or almost all) paid content contend that the obstacle to that up to now has been the "hassle factor." They believe that if it were easier to make "micropayments" - small payments charged to your credit card or PayPal account - with just one click, people would be more willing to pay. There is some merit to that, I suppose. I keep "one click purchasing" turned off on my Amazon account precisely because I don't want to make it that easy to spend money.
One problem is going to be the recent trends in the credit card industry. Card issuers are raising interest rates, bringing back annual fees, and there's talk that some may do away with the grace period and make interest start to accrue from the moment of purchase. That means if I don't want to pay interest, I'll have to go pay off my credit card balance immediately after every purchase I make. That would certainly motivate me to use the card less often.
Of course, I could be completely wrong in my feeling that people are going to be reluctant to pay for web content. I would never have dreamed, back in my younger days, that today most people would be paying for television. When I was a kid, it was all over-the-air and it was "free," paid for by advertising (and there was no way to fast forward past it, either, although most of us did view commercials as an opportunity to go to the bathroom or replenish our drinks or mute the sound and engage in a bit of real-world conversation).
And if we don't want to pay for the content online, someone has to. That means more ads. In a recent discussion about Bing, Microsoft's new search engine, a reader brought up something regarding one of its best features: the pop-up preview box that provides you with a sampling of the content on each link, so that you don't have to go to the page itself. His concern: will people use Bing to get the info they need from a web site and never actually visit that site, lowering its hit count and thus reducing its attractiveness to advertisers? It's a good question, but I'm not sure it's going to be a problem. The Bing preview is great for such things as easily finding the address or phone number of a business without hunting through its site. It's also good for getting enough of the flavor of the content to know whether that site is really relevant to your search. But the preview boxes don't contain so much information that someone who wanted detailed content would be able to bypass the original site. If they did, I could see how that could become a problem for site owners.
Running a web site takes a lot of time and can cost a good deal of money (I know that very well, since I run several of them). Site owners certainly need to be able to make revenues somehow. Tell us what you prefer: more (and possibly more intrusive) ads or direct payment? Or are you afraid that, as with cable TV, the for-pay "ad free" sites would soon be just as full of ads as the old "free" ones? How do you balance the site owners' need to make a living with Internet users' desire to maintain the status quo, where most web content is freely accessible?