Quality of content versus free GAFA
Posted: Mon Jan 27, 2025 9:48 am
Quite logically, the lockdowns of 2020 shattered records in terms of paid subscriptions for online media. This is the case of the New York Times , whose web revenues now exceed those of paper: between subscriptions and advertising revenues, $ 186 million in the second quarter, versus $ 175 million for paper sales and advertising.
In France, other records: an additional number of subscribers for the newspapers Le Monde , Le Figaro, the Mediapart website , etc.
In this context of digitalization of media, the challenge remains that of gambling data spain remuneration for online content that has gone viral on aggregation platforms such as Facebook or Google. How can we reconcile the quality of the content produced with the free distribution of it?
On the one hand, we want verified, qualified information, produced by educated journalism, which represents a cost. On the other hand, low-cost requires lower investments and its market share continues to grow.
In opposition to this state of affairs, in August 2018, a column by journalists published in Le Monde considered that Europe must adopt its copyright reform in order to protect the press from "the predation of Internet giants". It called for the attribution of "neighbouring rights" to the online press. Flashback..
In France, other records: an additional number of subscribers for the newspapers Le Monde , Le Figaro, the Mediapart website , etc.
In this context of digitalization of media, the challenge remains that of gambling data spain remuneration for online content that has gone viral on aggregation platforms such as Facebook or Google. How can we reconcile the quality of the content produced with the free distribution of it?
On the one hand, we want verified, qualified information, produced by educated journalism, which represents a cost. On the other hand, low-cost requires lower investments and its market share continues to grow.
In opposition to this state of affairs, in August 2018, a column by journalists published in Le Monde considered that Europe must adopt its copyright reform in order to protect the press from "the predation of Internet giants". It called for the attribution of "neighbouring rights" to the online press. Flashback..