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"Trust has gone – look at the government and banks. Where we are now, brands have to admit their mistakes."
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The owner of Denmark's "double-free" newspaper Nyhedsavisen admits defeat.
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"the revenue streams from the traditional newspaper-advertising model dried out for Nyhedsavisen due to the fierce competition on the media market in which the excess of supply ensured radicularly low prices."
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showing how easy it is to "manufacture" a pop star.
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"I suspect within any readership there is a small slice — maybe three percent — that is willing to pay. News organizations are going to have to find a way of getting money from that slice without driving away everybody else,"
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Well, if Nielson is right and you only need 3% of readers to be prepared to pay form content, this poll result is quite heartwarming.
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In short, it's not newspapers alone, or television, or ad agencies that are having problems. It's everything on and off the net.
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One thing is certain though: the public's search for "something for nothing" will go on forever.
Archive for May, 2009
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Jayaram confirmed that Twitter Search, which currently searches only the text of Twitter posts, will soon begin to crawl the links included in tweets and begin to index the content of those pages
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The way he tells it, the central betrayal of Simon's life is the gutting of the Sun by profit-obsessed owners and Pulitzer-obsessed editors.
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My time is pretty valuable to me, and the problem I face with much of "Free" content is that it takes a long time to find good content that is reliably produced (for instance, how often is your blog updated?). I want in-depth coverage and perspectives in areas that most consumers could care less about. For me, paying for an aggregator of executive-level business content is cheaper than trying to sort through mass-media content to find it on other sites (Harvard Business Review is way more expensive).
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Amazon has dictated what publications can charge and what they can't. Why? The industry needs all the incremental revenue it can get right now, and isn't in a position to really negotiate, but it can't let one company control the digital platform like Apple does with the music industry.
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… With a variety of Internet research tools readily at hand, it has never been easier for reporters to draw an independent assessment on any given day of who is right, who is wrong, and in what way.
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Every single piece of web 2.0 is about two people sharing some sort of content
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"I totally understand the music business desire to do something against illegal services. The thing you can do is not go after individual users but create a better service."
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Webby award winning business blog
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Webby award winner with a simple and effective way of showing off good photography.

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