By David Carr
nytimes.com
Last Tuesday, iTunes, Apple’s ubiquitous online music store that sold more than 2.4 billion tracks last year alone, changed its own tune, announcing that songs would no longer be sold with copying restrictions and that they would be available at various prices.
The digerati crowed over the collapse of the hated digital rights management (which Apple never liked, either) and record companies kicked up their heels at the thought of leaving behind the tyranny of the 99-cent price point.
But lost in the hubbub was the fact that Steve Jobs and Apple had been able to charge for content in the first place. Remember that when iTunes began, the music industry was being decimated by file sharing. By coming up with an easy user interface and obtaining the cooperation of a broad swath of music companies, Mr. Jobs helped pull the business off the brink. He has been accused of running roughshod over the music labels, which are a fraction of their former size. But they are still in business.
Those of us who are in the newspaper business could not be blamed for hoping that someone like him comes along and ruins our business as well by pulling the same trick: convincing the millions of interested readers who get their news every day free on newspapers sites that it’s time to pay up. ... READ FULL STORY
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Get involved. Join the discussion about the future of newspapers. Send us your questions, commentary, suggested articles or resource links. editor@newspaperproject.org
1/11/2009 08:35:00 AM
3 comments
There are just too many free online news organizations like the Exception Magazine from Maine http://exceptionmag.com/
The url http://exceptionmag.com/
I got a nice little community newspaper in the mail yesterday. Full of local news, ads, I would pay two bucks an issue. For my local Cox paper? I should be paid to read it. Loaded with old news, fluff and way too many ads.
Downsizing and divestiture will be good for print news.
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