
Chas Hartman of the University of Kentucky is trying to find an exact number, and currently has a survey set up online that you can fill out. It asks whether or not you read news (which if you don't, it won't do much good to fill out the survey), where you read it, etc. You can find the survey by checking out Gina Chen's blog, where she provides a link.
I think the question on journalist's minds is how they are going to make money if they no longer are publishing articles in newspapers that people have to buy. Eric Alterman wrote an essay for The New Yorker back in 2008 entitled Out of Print: The Life and Death of Newspapers in which he talks about the history of newspapers, and how they are slowly disappearing. As we've heard stated, online journalists do not get paid much of anything to write and article.
Ano

In the end, there will be some people that are willing to pay for news access online, but I feel that more people are going to try to find ways around it. The sites that offer free stories are going to have more people visiting than the one that charge.
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ReplyDeleteI would rather pay a monthly fee and know that my news come from a professional source, than get my news from the blog of a "professional" journalist.
ReplyDeleteI am not saying that ALL bloggers misinterpret or tweak the news, but I think there migt be some that do it even by mistake.
I feel the same way that more people will just find ways around having to purchase online news. There will always be the sites that have the news for free. Whether it is accurate or not is the question. I would not subscribe to an online subscription because I would rather have the hard copy in front of me if I am going to pay for my news.
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