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?

  • Sentient Loom
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    22 hours ago

    I prefer pay walls if I can buy a single article. I hate how everything is a subscription now.

  • Dizzy Devil Ducky
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    12 hours ago

    Depends on the site. Ads don’t bother me because ad block. I support paywalls in the case of sign up for some services, like InsaneJournal. Though, I otherwise have no preference either way since I usually don’t go places with paywalls and when I do, I usually find a way to bypass them.

  • @Nightsoul@lemmy.world
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    64 hours ago

    Ads over pay wall BUT with the option to pay to remove ads for a reasonable price. Then I have a way of supporting the content of I enjoy it enough

  • @BitSound@lemmy.world
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    115 hours 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@lemmy.world
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      64 hours 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.

    • @CameronDev@programming.dev
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      23 hours 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?

      • @CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        24 hours 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.

        • @athairmor@lemmy.world
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          34 hours 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.

      • @Linktank@lemmy.today
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        288 hours ago

        To both obviously.

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

        Fuck advertisers. FUUUUUUUUUUUCK paywals.

        • Dot.OP
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          78 hours ago

          But unless we are talking about very few non-profit news organizations, you have to choose one of them.

          • @HipsterTenZero
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            86 hours 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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              55 hours ago

              My computer is a temple and merchants can get out.

              Gotta steal this one and start using it.

            • patrick
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              43 hours 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.

          • @Kintarian@lemmy.world
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            14 hours 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.

          • @Linktank@lemmy.today
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            87 hours 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.

            • @Negligent_Embassy@links.hackliberty.org
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              7 hours 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

          • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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            7 hours 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

            • @simple@lemm.ee
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              76 hours 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@lemmy.world
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                14 hours 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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                  23 hours 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.

            • @JubilantJaguar@lemmy.world
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              56 hours 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?

  • SharkAttak
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    106 hours 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@lemmy.world
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      23 hours 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.

  • @RustyShackleford@literature.cafe
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    207 hours 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.

  • SavvyWolf
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    24 hours ago

    Make your content good enough and be a good enough person so that people are willing to give you money voluntarily or for token rewards. Let those with the means subsidize those without.

    Occasionally you see something and the comments are full of “let me throw money at you”. Maybe at least partially try that as a goal rather than searching for infinite growth at the expense of anyone who isn’t an executive.

  • @Kintarian@lemmy.world
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    248 hours 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.

  • @helpImTrappedOnline@lemmy.world
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    6 hours 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 bildboard 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.
    • Aatube
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      13 hours ago

      thank goodness most browsers disable autoplay with sound now

    • subignition
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      107 hours 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

  • m-p{3}
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    76 hours ago

    Ads, better to see ads and make the information available to all, than have a portion of the population unable to access the information at all.

  • kubica
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    148 hours ago

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

  • @dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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    35 hours ago

    This is a complex and nuanced question that is not as black and white as the binary choices you give. Both paywalls and ads, as they are implemented currently, suck and erode away at the usefulness of the Internet.

    Paywalls

    They typically tease content in the hopes people will be interested enough to pay for the content and other content. Sounds good on the surface, because the people putting in the effort to write articles should be paid. The problem is, the quality of journalism has also eroded to the point where it’s not worth paying for as much as it used to be. Excessive SEO has poisoned search results in such a way that paywalls content crowds out other valid search results. Throw in the fact that there is a possible future where articles may be written by AI, and it’s especially not worth it.

    Ads

    Ads are intrusive, they can contain malware/viruses, may be inappropriate for an audience (e.g., porn or violence related ads shown to kids). I’ve even had ads redirect the webpage to another website. Using fingerprinting to target “relevant” ads is a privacy nightmare, intrusive, and still is mostly irrelevant to the user. Those cookie pops are annoying as fuck — my guess is it’s malicious compliance with the EU — even when using a site that is based in the US that targets only US citizens. Certain browsers are blurring the lines between useful browser functionality and increasing ad revenue.


    Either way you look at it, these companies are eroding public trust in search of the almighty “engagement” dollar. And then they’re all shocked pikachu when people find ways to circumvent paying for content. So they double down on making things as difficult as possible for the end user, which makes the user double down on hating these companies and their malicious practices.

    Ads and paywalls can work, but everybody (from publishers/content creators to advertisers and ad networks) need to sit down fix the glaring problems:

    1. No PII or fingerprinting in any analytics
    2. Search engines need to either remove paywalls content from results, or flag the result as paywalled and allow users to filter them out
    3. Journalists need to step up their game and stop writing garbage nobody wants to read
    4. Ad networks need to be more hands on with making sure ads are appropriate and not malicious in any way
    5. STOP CROWDING OUT YOUR CONTENT WITH ADS!

    I’m sure we all could come up with more solutions. But we all know that all parties involved won’t do a damned thing to make things better for us.

    And yet no matter how bad it gets, it still somehow is profitable. So pirating material doesn’t seem to be an effective means of protest because it seems there are enough people out there willing to pay for all of this garbage.