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TheOtherHobbes parent
Micropayments are a constant financial stressor and source of friction. You're never quite sure how much you're going to consume/pay, you're constantly having to make a choice every time you read something, and there's no way to say "Actually that click wasn't worth 10c".

Tiny local papers are mostly all owned by the same company anyway.

People do actually pay for subscriptions or donations if they like the content enough. In the UK the Times, Financial Times, and Telegraph all run on subscriptions, and the Guardian is a weird - but successful - kind of donation-ware.

Also Substack and Medium.

The alternative is aggregation - like Spotify for news, but without the cutthroat ethics. Pay a fixed amount, possibly tiered, read what you want up to your tier, and the aggregator distributes the income.


jbverschoor
They're not if the infrastructure is there (and it is.. apple pay, google pay, paypal, even tokens... although that's a bit of a hurdle)

The issues are:

1) There still are no *MICRO* transactions. I can't pay 10ct.

2) I don't want my (payment) information scattered all over the place. I simply want to pay a small amount, and I want the payment provider to protect my privace/data.

I have paid for a subscription once just to read a single article. It took me two weeks of calling and other dark patterns to stop the subscription. I'll simply never do that again. period.

Most articles/information is entertainment disguised as something useful anyway.

The Spotify model only works for music somehow. If you mean a Netflix model, no thank you. I'm not going to support them into bullying the world into getting 5 subscriptions because the articles are scattered over services.

wkat4242
The guardian works because it has a reach far beyond the UK for having a clear progressive identify and deep insights. They're a paper that still does what it should. Most don't. I've subscribed for a while too but I dropped it during Brexit. I'm not in or from the UK and I got sick of reading about Brexit every day and Boris Johnson asking the EU for things he knew he couldn't possibly have (like the separation of goods and services market)
carlosjobim
> The alternative is aggregation - like Spotify for news, but without the cutthroat ethics. Pay a fixed amount, possibly tiered, read what you want up to your tier, and the aggregator distributes the income.

And that is honestly a great alternative for news and written content. Syndication and paywalls. It's the future. How come death metal bands accept to be on the same platform as Japanese teen bands, but newspapers can't accept to be on the same platform as a rival who leans slightly more to the right or left than themselves?

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