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Monthly Archives: March 2011
Online News as a Disruptive Technology
In my last post I promised to consider how online news organizations can produce expensive content like reporting from Iraq. Sites wanting to produce high-quality, expensive content face a chicken-and-egg problem. If you have a large audience, you can spread … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
6 Comments
Web Specialization vs. Newspaper Autarky
Judging from the comments on my two posts last week on reporting and paywalls, I didn’t do a good job of making my case. I think that’s partly because this is an argument about culture as much as economics. Traditional … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
2 Comments
Is Pro Publica “Awful” and “Leftist”?
Reihan Salam was kind enough to link to Monday’s post comparing the New York Times to Pro Publica, which led Matthew Vadum of the Capital Research Center to lambast him for promoting what Vadum considers an “awful leftist media outlet.” … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
3 Comments
MetroPCS as the New T-Mobile
As a counterpoint to the arguments I made yesterday, Reihan Salam points me to this article about MetroPCS, which is on deck to be the new #4 wireless carrier: MetroPCS targets big city markets and keeps their prices low by … Continue reading
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1 Comment
Limited Government and the Spectrum Market
AT&T, the second-largest mobile phone company, recently announced that it intends to purchase T-Mobile, the number four wireless firm. Jerry Brito has a typically insightful post in which he argues that this merger is all about spectrum scarcity: If a … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
15 Comments
Misguided Moralism in the Paywall Debate
Last week I got in a bit of an argument with Adam Thierer, Randy Picker, and others about the New York Times paywall. I think a paywall is a bad business strategy, but my opposition to paywalls is mostly a … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
16 Comments
Shoe-Leather Reporting at the New York Times
The New York Times‘s says they’re going to take another stab at erecting a paywall, just four years after they abandoned their previous effort. On Friday, I got into a debate with Dan Rothschild about it. Dan wrote that “if … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
14 Comments
Intellectuals and Political Coalitions
Matt Yglesias points to this fascinating paper about the influence of intellectuals on political coalitions: Following Converse’s advice that ideology is the product of a “creative synthesis,” conducted by a narrow group of intellectuals, this paper reports on attempts to … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
3 Comments