I started to notice that more sites are turning into paywalls, and I don’t like that and would prefer ads over subscriptions.

I am curious, what does the general community think about that?

      • Swordgeek
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        112 months ago

        Yeah, “good journalism” is definitely what you’re paying for with ads or paywalls.

        To be clear, I support journalists - and they deserve to get paid for their efforts.

        But (a) OP didn’t specifically mention news sites, and (b) the revenue from websites via ads or paywalls is going directly into the coffers of the ultra-wealthy. Find me a news outlet that successfully implemented a paywall and then started paying their journalists and reporters vastly more money.

        You won’t, because they don’t.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        You realize that if newspapers offered a federated service (pay once, you get them all), they’d make money hand over fist?

        But noooo…each newspaper wants you to pay.

        I’d pay upwards of $20 a month if that guaranteed me access to the major newspapers (NYT, WaPo, LA Times, etc.) and my local one with one subscription.

        • @[email protected]
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          142 months ago

          Your local library might give you free digital access to most (or all) of those, if you haven’t checked.

        • @athairmor
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          62 months ago

          I’m not saying it’s a bad idea but it’s interesting how similar that is to cable TV.

          Of course, cable TV was largely ad-free at first then you ended up paying for it and getting ads.

        • Prison Mike
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          22 months ago

          I do this with Apple News. Not sure if anything like it exists, but what worries me is Apple cut their News development staff recently which makes me think people (at least Apple users) don’t value journalism enough to support it.

          • Swordgeek
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            22 months ago

            Apple is worth THREE AND A HALF TRILLION DOLLARS!!!

            Say that again. Three and a half trillion dollars.

            They have cash-on-hand reserves of in excess of $60bn. They could give every single employee $200,000 and still have half of it in the bank.

            Tim Cook is a relative pauper in the CEO game, with a net worth upwards of two billion. He could personally pay a team of a three thousand reporters with full benefits and remain a billionaire.

            It’s not people refusing to pay for journalism, it’s robber barons refusing to pay journalists.

      • @[email protected]
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        372 months ago

        To both obviously.

        A more genuine response would be “Ads, so I can use an adblocker on them.”

        Fuck advertisers. FUUUUUUUUUUUCK paywals.

          • @[email protected]
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            152 months ago

            maybe for-profit news organizations should get another business model. My computer is a temple and merchants can get out.

            • CALIGVLA
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              112 months ago

              My computer is a temple and merchants can get out.

              Gotta steal this one and start using it.

            • patrick
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              62 months ago

              How much money do you donate to your ad-free lemmy instance? Or the rest of the free services you’re using?

              For the vast majority of people, that number is $0.

          • @[email protected]
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            72 months ago

            You know that people aren’t forced to interact with websites right? Like if I don’t have a choice about if your website is going to show me ads, then I DON’T HAVE A CHOICE to view your website. Those ones that block the entire page until you whitelist them? I just close them and move on with my life. Nobodys product is so important that I will interrupt my day to view their advertising for it. And no website has such a reputation that I am willing to pay them or whitelist them for advertising BEFORE VIEWING THE FUCKING CONTENT.

            • @[email protected]
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              2 months ago

              I agree I close them if I see that, but just so you know a combo of bypass paywalls clean, and ublock origin (go into settings and enable all cookie notices, social widgets, and annoyances) will bypass 95% of those without you even knowing

              If that fails go to web.archive.org and paste the URL, that works most of the time. There’s a web extension called “web archives” that makes this easy if you’re ok with other extensions

          • Swordgeek
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            32 months ago

            No, you really really really don’t.

            I’m old enough to have been online when commercial content was illegal, and I’ve watched as aggressive commerce has crept into every single corner of the internet.

            You don’t need to have ads to support a website, you need ads to profit from a website. The idea that everything - information, news, community, society - not only CAN be monetized but MUST be monetized is relatively new, destructive, and anti-human.

            The mere idea that you have to choose between two ways of throwing money at billionaires is a symptom of the terminal stages of capitalism. We’re going to have a rough 50 years or so, but this has to end.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 months ago

            Why? Prove to me that your binary is true.

            If someone sets up a website, and uses ads to fund it, 99% of the time their goal is profit.

            How they profit is their issue, not mine.

            Many websites exist without ads, hosted by people who simply want to have a website.

            As for paywalls, again, people are creating a profit-generating barrier for something. Again, that’s their concern, not mine. Generally when I hit a paywall I just close the tab. I’m not the sucker they’re looking for.

            If I’m really curious, I may run the URL through archive.is

            • @[email protected]
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              72 months ago

              So you think people should just work around the clock making content and not get anything for it? I keep seeing this view and it sounds so naive, you can’t expect donations to keep you afloat. Even hosting the website and domain names cost money.

              • @Kintarian
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                22 months ago

                I wouldn’t mind paying for quality content, but usually you end up paying for crap and seeing ads too. So now the corporate media is double dipping right out of your wallet. Journalism is dead and we’re probably never getting it back.

                • Aatube
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                  22 months ago

                  Okay, so you never go back to ye olde shitty website because they are absolute scum. Now you keep getting to pay the quality content for making the stuff you enjoy without even touching your wallet.

              • Swordgeek
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                12 months ago

                People always have.

                How many people get paid to go to ham radio clubs, to write up plans for model airplanes, or to share telescope mirror polishing techniques? How many people try to profit off of community seed/plant exchanges?

                The only difference is that people are now looking for venues to generate profit by producing content, rather than producing content for its own sake. The concept of “every sharing of information must be financially profitable” is a sickness - a festering disease.

                Domain names cost about $50/year. Self-hosting can be done for free with most ISPs; and if you’re getting enough traffic that you need to pay for hosting, it starts pretty cheaply.

                Profit is destroying community at every turn. Resist the relentless lust to make an extra buck, and ENGAGE with people.

                • @[email protected]
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                  42 months ago

                  Wanting to stay alive is not a “relentless lust to make an extra buck”. You’re portraying people wanting to earn money as villains trying to abuse you. Putting ads in a website where someone puts so much effort to create is NOT evil. Youtubers without sponsorships for example simply wouldn’t exist, because nobody would put in dozens of hours of work a week if it wasn’t lucrative.

                  The concept of “every sharing of information must be financially profitable” is a sickness - a festering disease.

                  I would argue the concept of expecting everyone else’s hard work to be free is selfish. I’m not talking about major publications that have millions of dollars, I’m talking about small websites where the creator needs it to succeed or else it shuts down a year later.

                  How many people get paid to go to ham radio clubs, to write up plans for model airplanes, or to share telescope mirror polishing techniques? How many people try to profit off of community seed/plant exchanges?

                  What you’re describing is a hobby that people with free time and extra money do. This isn’t what 99.9% of content creators work on or have the capability of doing.

            • @JubilantJaguar
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              62 months ago

              Alright as far as your argument goes. But what about content that has value for society? I’m talking, of course, among other things, about serious journalism. Do only “suckers” pay for that, too?

          • @Kintarian
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            12 months ago

            The thing is if I see an article that’s blocked by a paywall, I can simply go to another site that has the exact same story for free.

  • @Kintarian
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    302 months ago

    I would rather have ads. If I were to subscribe to every website that asked me to subscribe I would be paying $1,000 a month.

  • @[email protected]
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    282 months ago

    Ad’s. If a sites using the paywall approach, they’ve made an enemy for life with me.

    Now I’m not saying I like ads, but as long as they aren’t aggressive I will tolerate them. If they get to aggressive, I’ll block them.

    Don’t get me wrong, I understand it’s a business, but I’m a human with a low tolerance for being jerked around.

  • @helpImTrappedOnline
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    2 months ago

    I wound not mind ads if they met the following conditions (in no particular order).

    • Actually vet them, no scams and viruses.
    • minimal obstruction to what I’m there for. A bilboard on the side of the highway is fine, but when they put in the road, there’s a problem.
    • Mix it up. YouTube playing the same ad 500 times in a row is obnoxious.
    • No yelling/loud shit. Play your ad, don’t blow out my speakers.
    • If on a silent website, video ads must be auto muted.
    • if I’m on data or a metered network, don’t auto play ads and keep the total data usage to a minimum.
    • Medical and health ads aren’t allowed. You can have PSAs about conditions and that there are treatment options, but it should your doctor researching and recommending specific medicine not a patient going in with some ad.
    • subignition
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      102 months ago

      Globally disabling autoplay in my browser brought me so much sanity. It’s worth the small fraction of sites that behave badly because of it

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      Add political ads to the last one too.

      99% of the time it’s either an outright lie or stretched exaggeration of the truth. No one is getting any correct information from a political ad except either side’s specific spin on it and it causes a lot of average people to incorrectly believe they are informed on who and what they are voting on that they don’t need to do more due diligence before heading to the polls.

      Also favors rich politicians and more well funded campaigns over less well off politicians and less well funded organizations and causes.

    • Aatube
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      12 months ago

      thank goodness most browsers disable autoplay with sound now

  • @BitSound
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    182 months ago

    False dichotomy, I’d rather see other funding models like Patreon/Kickstarter. Paying gets you early access/bonus stuff/whatever, and you don’t need intrusive technologies like ads/paywalls.

    • @Dozzi92
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      82 months ago

      Yeah, I want to pay you directly. I, admittedly, pirate things. When those things are good, I make an effort to go send money to the creator directly. Sometimes it’s hard, especially with things like books. I don’t want to buy it on Amazon. And unless someone is self-published, they’re getting peanuts. I’d much rather Venmo an author money direct. When Radiohead released In Rainbows way back when and put it out for “pay what you want,” I gave them five bucks I think.

      I understand it can’t always be like that, and that the people between a content creator and me do serve some purpose.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      You may want to clarify, as patreon and kickstarter are often used as paywalls. Do you mean people can donate to a cause, and everyone gets the benefits?

      • @BitSound
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        22 months ago

        The latter, but I also don’t really mind paywalls in the form of “get early access” like SMBC comics or “get exclusive special content” like a lot of bands do.

        You can just straight paywall with those too, but you don’t have too. A band I like crowdfunded a music video and you can watch it free on youtube, but if you didn’t crowdfund it you missed out on perks that go all the way up to being in the music video

  • kubica
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    152 months ago

    I don’t like ads, but for paywalls I just close the page like it was a 404 error.

  • @Matriks404
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    152 months ago

    I’d accept paywalls If I could pay for a ‘package’ where I have access for all these paywalled websites and each gets money proportional to how often I’ve used them. There’s no way I am going to pay for all these separately.

    But there’s no such thing, so I just block ads, and whenever I see a paywalled website I just close it.

  • BougieBirdie
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    142 months ago

    I mean, to be honest a lot of us prefer ads because we use an ad-blocker. I have mixed feelings about either option.

    There is such a thing as a tasteful implementation of advertising, but it’s very often overdone and a nuisance. So because so many of them are a nuisance, my general attitude is to block everything. If you want to support a particular cause or creator, you can allow filters in your ad-blocker so you only see ads on that website.

    As far as paywalls go, it does resemble the traditional newspaper/magazine subscription model. In theory, I don’t mind financially contributing to a service I use because it means the service continues to prosper. Practically, these fees are often overinflated and a disproportionate amount of the proceeds go to the executive class. Also unlike newspapers, you usually can’t buy just one article, and instead you’re locked into another subscription.

    • Max-P
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      62 months ago

      Yeah, I used to not block ads but they’re so invasive these days. If 2 banner ads pop on at the top and bottom of the screen with a full screen app on top with ads between every paragraph and a PIP video ad on top, yeah, I don’t even bother reading the article.

      And I sure as hell am not subscribing to a $10/mo subscription because someone linked to a paywalled article either. It’s so crazy those sites just assume every visitor is a recurring visitor that might subscribe. Definitely wish there was some sort of micropayment thing, like pay 25 cents to view it or something.

    • @jimmycrackcrack
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      This is the worst thing about it, they’re only offering subscriptions. Newspapers kind of faded away from popular use before I was really old enough to be likely to get them, but I did used to buy some print magazines, they were great. If I had some time to kill or knew I’d be on a flight I could choose to buy ONE issue for one article, and by virtue of my tastes the rest of the magazine would be stuff I’d want to read as well and could come back and read anytime. They often had ads in then even though I’d paid and other than the fact that a proportion of the pages I’d paid for didn’t have readable material, those were fine too, you just skipped past them. They were “relevant” in so far as they were paid for be advertisers who correctly presumed people who read this or that publication would probably be more interested in these products and services, but they didn’t have any ability to literally spy on me in ways that frankly would and should have been illegal using equivalent tools to have done so at the time.

      I am not going to subscribe to your random website or online publication because I wanted to read about this one topic and I hate the damn ads that make reading it impossible and require deliberately allowing things that you should never allow on your device for the ads to work how the publisher wants them. This is difficult because it makes me part of the problem, as I’m blocking the ads and either bypassing paywalls or mentally deleting having even encountered the website that presented one to me and immediately closing the page.

      To actually help fund the service I’m going to need a way to make ultra small payments of a few cents for individual articles, (probably wouldn’t work because of processing fees) or more likely something like a subscription but not to a publication, to a service that will allow access to a range of publications and doles out money to them based on which content I consumed over a time period. It’s just no longer realistic, if it ever was, to expect me to want to religiously consume media from one specific publisher. This idea kind of sucks for media companies who are currently getting squeezed by social media and search giants and who sit between them and their audience and suck up all the ad revenue for the content they didn’t even produce and now with my idea you’d have that and an additional third party sucking up subscription money they would have traditionally courted directly from the consumer but I don’t realistically see much of a choice.

  • Lucy :3
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    142 months ago

    I can block ads 100% reliably, and haven’t seen one, except in streams where the streamer had to watch one, or someone else’s device, in years. Paywalls are much harder to circumvent and need a whole plethora of extensions and 3rd party sites, instead of just uBlock + FF.

        • @Kintarian
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          12 months ago

          Ga, go outside? No way man 😱

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        You assumed that, along with assuming your binary is true.

        If that’s what you meant, then that’s what you should’ve posted.

        Your binary isn’t true, and there will always be ways to block ads.

      • Lucy :3
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        32 months ago

        Honestly, paywalls. I’ll just not use anything not FOSS then. Ads are much more annoying and 99% of times brainrot.

  • SharkAttak
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    122 months ago

    Banners! I was fine with banners, you can look at them or not if you want, you can click them or not… guess they weren’t profitable anymore.

    • @ArgentRaven
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      32 months ago

      Companies didn’t vet them, and outside to other as companies. Turns out they didn’t do any due diligence, and let viruses leak through. That’s when people really started blocking them.

  • @Squorlple
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    102 months ago

    Ads, because even though they waste my time, I still have my money. Also:

  • @[email protected]
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    92 months ago

    Paywalls for news. It makes it easy for me to know that this is not an important news article and can skip reading it. Time saving.

  • PointingAcorn
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    92 months ago

    Ads, tastefully. Many websites have too many in too many places, pretty much asking for the viewers to use an ad blocker.