A Paywall is an online device that bars internet users from accessing webpage content (most notably news content) without paid subscription.[1] There are both “hard” and “soft” paywalls in use. “Hard” paywalls allow minimal to no access to content without subscription, while “soft” paywalls allow more flexibility in what users can view without subscribing. Newspapers have been implementing paywalls on their websites to increase their revenue which has been diminishing due to a decline in print subscriptions and advertising revenue.[2] While paywalls are used to bring in extra revenue for companies by charging for online content, they have also been used to increase the number of print subscribers. Some newspapers offer access to online content including delivery of a Sunday print edition at a lower price point than online access alone.[3] News sites such as BostonGlobe.com and NYTimes.com use this tactic because it increases both their online revenue and their print circulation (which in turn provides more ad revenue).[3] Creating online ad revenue has been an ongoing battle for newspapers – currently an online advertisement only brings in 10-20% of the funds brought in by a duplicate print ad.[2] It is said that “neither digital ad cash nor digital subscriptions via a paywall are in anything like the shape that will be needed for [newspapers] to take the strain if a print presence is wiped away.”[2] According to Poynter media expert Bill Mitchell, in order for a paywall to generate sustainable revenue, newspapers must create “new value” (higher quality, innovative, etcetera) in their online content that merits payment which previously free content did not.[4] Most news coverage of the use of paywalls analyzes them from the perspective of commercial success, whether through increasing revenue by growing print subscriptions or solely through paywall revenue. However, as a solely profit-driven device, the use of a paywall also brings up questions of media ethics pertaining to accessible democratic news coverage.
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The history of the paywall is one of fluctuation. The first major newspaper to implement a paywall was The Wall Street Journal in 1997, which gained more than 200,000 subscribers in a little over a year.[5] The Wall Street Journal has retained its “hard” paywall since its inception – acquiring over one million users by mid 2007.[5] In 2010, following in the footsteps of The Wall Street Journal, The Times of London, implemented a “hard” paywall; a decision which was highly controversial, because unlike The Wall Street Journal, The Times is a general news site, and it was said that rather than paying users would seek the information for free elsewhere.[6] Following the paywall’s implementation, however, it has been deemed neither a success nor a failure, having recruited over 100,000 paying visitors.[7] In contrast, The Guardian has resisted the use of a paywall, citing “a belief in an open internet” and “care in the community” as its reasoning – an explanation found in its welcome article to online news readers who, blocked from The Time’s site following the implementation of their paywall, came to The Guardian for online news.[8] The Guardian has since opted to experiment with other revenue increasing ventures like open API. Other papers, prominently The New York Times, have oscillated between the implementation and removal of various paywalls.[9] Because online news remains a relatively new medium, experimentation is a key factor in finding a balance that will maintain revenue while keeping online news consumers satisfied.[4]
Early implementations of paywalls proved unsuccessful, often resulting in removal.[10] The paywall model received skepticism from a variety of sources, including Arianna Huffington, who declared "the paywall is history" in a 2009 article in The Guardian.[11] In 2010, Jimmy Wales of Wikipedia fame reportedly called the Times paywall "a foolish experiment." [12] One major concern was with content so widely available, potential subscribers would turn to free sources for their news.[13] The adverse effects of earlier implementations included decline in traffic[14] and poor search engine optimization.[10]
The “hard” paywall, as used by The Wall Street Journal and The Times, requires paid subscription before any of their online content can be accessed. A paywall of this design is considered “the riskiest option.”[15] It is estimated that a website will lose 90% of its online audience and ad revenue only to gain it back through its ability to produce online content appealing enough to attract subscribers.[15] News sites with “hard” paywalls therefore succeed if they:
Many experts denounce the “hard” paywall because of its inflexibility, believing it acts as a major deterrent for users. Financial blogger Felix Salmon writes that when you encounter a “paywall and can’t get past it, you simply go away and feel disappointed in your experience.”[16] Media mogul Jimmy Wales of Wikipedia has also argued that the use of a “hard” paywall diminishes a site’s influence. Wales stated that by implementing a “hard” paywall The Times of London “made itself irrelevant."[17] Though The Times has potentially increased its revenue, it has decreased its traffic by 60%.[6]
A “softer” pay wall strategy includes allowing free access to select content, while keeping premium content behind a paywall. Such a strategy has been said to lead to “the creation of two categories: cheap fodder available for free (often created by junior staffers), and more “noble” content.”[15] This type of separation brings into question the egalitarianism of the online news medium. According to political and media theorist Robert A Hackett, “the commercial press of the 1800s, the modern world’s first mass medium, was born with a profound democratic promise: to present information without fear or favour, to make it accessible to everyone, and to foster public rationality based on equal access to relevant facts.”[18] Intentional separation of content created by a paywall directly opposes the democratic promise the news medium was founded on, and which the internet originally allowed for. The Boston Globe has taken this separation one step further by creating two different sites. The Boston Globe recently created a new premium content site under the domain name BostonGlobe.com which is protected by a “hard” paywall requiring paid subscription. In addition, however, The Boston Globe is retaining its previous site, Boston.com, available free to all but with only select content remaining on the site. Boston Globe editor Martin Baron states this change should be seen as "two different sites for two different kinds of reader – some understand [that] journalism needs to be funded and paid for. Other people just won't pay. We have a site for them."[19] While the internet was initially promoted as a platform endorsing a “more egalitarian communication system,”[20] the dual-site method implemented by The Boston Globe illustrates how a “hard” paywall can create obvious inequalities between content that is free, and content that must be paid for.
The “soft” paywall is best embodied by the metered model. The metered paywall allows users to view a specific number of articles before requiring paid subscription.[15] In contrast to sites allowing access to select content outside of the paywall, the metered paywall allows access to any article as long as the user has not surpassed the set limit. The Financial Times allows users to access 10 articles before becoming paid subscribers.[15] The New York Times controversially[2] implemented a metered paywall in June 2010[5] which lets users view 20 free articles a month before paid subscription. Their metered paywall has been defined as not only soft, but “porous,"[16] because it also allows access to any link posted on a social media site, and up to 25 free articles a day if accessed through a search engine.[21] The model is designed to allow the paper to “retain traffic from light users”, which in turn allows the paper to keep their number of visitors high, while receiving circulation revenue from the sites heavy users.[22] Using this model, The New York Times garnered 224,000 subscribers in the first three months.[2] While many proclaimed The New York Time’s paywall a success after it reported a profit in the third quarter of 2011, the profit increase is said to be “ephemeral” and “largely based on a combination of cutbacks and the sale of assets.”[23] Though the success of a metered paywall would create revenue for the newspaper and increased freedom for the public, the profitability of the metered model has yet to be sufficiently proven.
Professional reception to the implementation of paywalls has been mixed. Most discussion of paywalls centers on their success or failure as business ventures, and overlooks their ethical implications for maintaining an informed public. In the paywall debate there are those who see the implementation of a paywall as a “sandbag strategy” – a strategy which may help increase revenue in the short term, but not a strategy that will foster future growth for the newspaper industry.[9] For the “hard” paywall specifically, however, there seems to be an industry consensus that the negative effects (loss of readership) outweigh the potential revenue, unless the newspaper targets a niche audience.[15][24] There are also those who remain optimistic about the use of paywalls to help revitalize floundering newspaper revenues. Those who believe implementing paywalls will succeed, however, continually buffer their opinion with contingencies. Bill Mitchell states that for a paywall to bring new revenue and not deter current readers, newspapers must: “invest in flexible systems, exploit their journalists' expertise in niche areas, and, crucially, offer readers their money's worth in terms of new value.”[4] The State of the News Media’s 2011 annual report on American journalism makes the sweeping claim that: “[t]o survive financially, the consensus on the business side of news operations is that news sites not only need to make their advertising smarter, but they also need to find some way to charge for content and to invent new revenue streams other than display advertising and subscriptions.”[25] Even those who do not believe in the general success of paywalls recognize that, for a profitable future, newspapers must start generating more attractive content with added value, or investigate new sources of earning revenue.[9]
General user response to the implementation of paywalls has been measured through a number of recent studies which analyze reader’s online news consumption habits. A Canadian study completed by the Canadian Media Research Consortium entitled “Canadian Consumers Unwilling to Pay for News Online,” directly identifies the Canadian response to paywalls. Surveying 1,700 Canadians, the study found that 92% of participants who read the news online would rather find a free alternative than pay for their preferred site (in comparison to 82% of Americans[26]), while 81% stated that they would absolutely not pay for their preferred online news site.[27] Based on the poor reception of paid content by the participants, the study concludes with a statement similar to those of the media experts, stating, with the exception of prominent papers such as The Wall Street Journal and The Times of London that given the “current public attitudes, most publishers had better start looking elsewhere for revenue solutions.”[24]
Hackett argues that a “forum on the internet [...] can function as a specialized or smaller-scale public sphere.”[28] In the past, the internet has been an ideal location for the general public to gather and discuss relevant news issues[29] – an activity made accessible first through free access to online news content, and subsequently the ability to comment on the content, creating a forum. Erecting a paywall restricts the public’s open communication with one another by restricting the ability to both read and share online news. The obvious way in which a paywall restricts equal access to the online public sphere is through requiring payment, deterring those who don’t want to pay, and barring those who cannot from joining the online discussion. The restriction of equal access was taken to a new extreme when the UK’s The Independent, in the fall of 2011, placed a paywall on their American and Canadian readers and not their national audience.[30] Online news media have the proven ability to create global connection beyond the typical reach of a public sphere. In Democratizing Global Media, Hackett and global communications theorist Yuezhi Zhao describe how a new “wave of media democratization arises in the era of the internet which has facilitated transnational civil society networks of and for democratic communication.”[31] By placing a paywall on their international readers, The Independent hinders the growth and democratic quality of the public sphere created by the internet. The use of paywalls has also received many complaints from online news readers regarding an online subscription’s inability to be shared like a traditional printed paper. While a printed paper can be shared among friends and family, the ethics behind sharing an online subscription are less clear because there is no physical object involved. The New York Times’ “ethicist” columnist, Ariel Kaminer, addressing the question of sharing online subscription, states that “sharing with your spouse or young child is one thing; sharing with friends or family who live elsewhere is another.”[32] The reader comments following Kaminer’s response focus on the dichotomy between paying for a printed paper and paying for an online subscription.[32] A printed paper’s ease of access meant that more individuals could read a single copy, and that everyone who read the paper had the ability to send a letter to the editor without the hassle of registering or paying for the subscription. As such, the use of a paywall closes off the communication in both the personal realm and online. This opinion is not just held by online news readers, but also by opinion writers. Jimmy Wales comments that he “would rather write [an opinion piece] where it is going to be read,” declaring that “putting opinion pieces behind paywalls [makes] no sense.”[17] Without easy access to both read and share insights and opinions, the online news platform loses an essential characteristic of democratic exchange.
The use of a paywall to bar individuals from accessing news content online without payment, brings up numerous ethical questions. According to Hackett, media are already “failing to furnish citizens with ready access to relevant civic information.”[33] The implementation of paywalls on previously free news content heightens this failure through intentional withholding. Hackett cites “general cultural and economic mechanisms, such as the commodification of information and the dependence of commercial media on advertising revenue” as two of the greatest influences on media performance. According to Hackett, these cultural and economic mechanisms “generate violations of the democratic norm of equality.”[34] Implementation of a paywall addresses and intimately ties the two mechanisms cited by Hackett, as the paywall commodifies news content to bring in revenue from both readers and from increased circulation of printed paper’s ads. The result of these mechanisms, as stated by Hackett, is an impediment to “equal access to relevant [news] facts.”[18] The commodification of information –making news into a product that must be purchased– restricts the egalitarian founding principal of the newspaper. Editor’s Weblog reporter Katherine Travers, addressing this issue in a post discussing the future of The Washington Post, asks, “is digital subscription as permissible as charging a couple of dollars now and then for a paper copy?”[35] While subscription fees have long been attached to print newspapers, all other forms of news have traditionally been free.[36] The UK’s Daily Mail argues that print revenue is unique because “people pay for the convenience of print in recognition of the special cost of production and delivery of a tangible product and because they purchase it whole.”[36] Online news, in comparison has existed as a medium of free dissemination. Poynter digital media fellow Jeff Sonderman outlines the ethical tension created by a paywall. Sonderman explains that “[t]he underlying tension is that newspapers act simultaneously as businesses and as servants of the public’s interest. As for-profit enterprises, they have the right (the duty, even) to make money for shareholders or private owners. But most also claim to have a social compact, in which they safeguard the entire public interest and help their entire community shape and understand its shared values.”[37] By implementing a paywall before experimenting with other revenue increasing initiatives, a newspaper arguably puts profit before the public.
While there has been little coverage and discussion of the ethical implications of the paywall regarding newspapers’ obligation to maintain a generally informed public, there are two prominent instances where companies have addressed the restriction of online news coverage. First is the removal of paywalls in the face of breaking news (news covering national or local emergencies). Second is Google’s “First Click Free” application, which news providers can implement if they wish to make news stories of interest accessible to readers regardless of a paywall.
Some newspapers have demonstrated an ethical conscience by removing their paywall from blocking content covering emergencies. When Hurricane Irene hit the United States’ east coast in late August 2011, The New York Times declared that all storm related coverage, accessed both online and through mobile devices, would be free to readers.[38] The New York Times assistant managing editor, Jeff Roberts, discusses the papers decision, stating: “[w]e are aware of our obligations to our audience and to the public at large when there is a big story that directly impacts such a large portion of people.”[37] In his article discussing the removal of paywalls, Soderman commends The New York Times' action, stating that, while a publisher “commits to a paywall as the best business strategy for his news company, there may be some stories or subjects which carry such importance and urgency that it is irresponsible to withhold them from nonsubscribers."[37] While creating holes in a paywall demonstrates an ethical conscience, it also suggests that The New York Times does not believes they have “an obligation to their audience”[37] to provide in depth coverage (beyond the limits of their paywall) on subjects other than natural disasters.
Google’s mission statement: to “organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful,” rings of egalitarianism. In hopes of holding news sites to the same standard of information proliferation, Google created an option to news publishers online called “first click free.”[39] “First click free” is an application which allows web users using Google search to access content behind a paywall if it matches the user’s search criteria. According to Google, the application’s two main goals are:
As such, the “first click free” application promotes egalitarian access to content, while benefitting the news site by directing traffic to and creating interest in the site’s content. For example, in the past Google gave blanket access to FT.com articles that were behind the site's paywall through its news search engine. Google has since introduced a five-article daily limit on this method of bypassing FT.com's paywall.[40]
Given the overwhelming opinion that, regardless of paywall success, new revenue sources must be sought out for newspapers’ financial success, it is important to highlight new business initiatives.In addition to erecting paywalls, newspapers have been increasingly exploiting tablet and mobile news products, the profitability of which remains inconclusive.[41][42] Some newspapers have also embraced targeting niche audiences, such as the Daily Mail’s Mail Online in the UK.[36] Another strategy, pioneered by The New York Times, involves creating new revenue by packaging old content in e-books and special feature offerings, to create an appealing product for readers. The draw of these packages is not just the topic but the authors and the breadth of coverage. According to reporter Mathew Ingram, newspapers can benefit from these special offerings in two ways, first by taking advantage of old content when new interest arises, such as an anniversary or an important event, and second, through the creation of packages of general interest. The New York Times, for example, has created packages on baseball, golf and the digital revolution.(ebooks) [43]
An open API (application programming interface) makes the online news site “a platform for data and information that [the newspaper company] can generate value from in other ways.”[9] Opening their API makes a newspaper’s data available to outside sources, allowing developers and other services to make use of a paper’s content for a fee.[44] The Guardian, in keeping with its “belief in an open internet,”[8] has been experimenting with the use of API.[9] The Guardian has created an “open platform” which works on a three level system:
While an open API is regarded as a gamble just like a paywall, journalist Matthew Ingram ethically notes that the use of an open API aims at “profiting from the open exchange of information and other aspects of an online-media world, while the [paywall] is an attempt to create the kind of artificial information scarcity that newspapers used to enjoy.”[9] An open API keeps news content free to the public while the newspaper makes a profit from the quality and usefulness of its data to other businesses. The open API strategy can be commended because it takes the pressure off of the news room to continually investigate and explore new means of revenue. Instead, the open API strategy relies on the interest and ideas of those outside the newsroom, to whom the site’s content and data are attractive.[44]
In the UK, MoneyWeek started using a paywall in 2005. Now 60% of the magazine content stays behind the subscriber paywall for one month. This includes cover stories and in-depth articles. Managing Director Toby Bray says they are keen to emulate the FT.com model which gives access to a certain number of articles per month across the entire site.[46]
The Wall Street Journal was for a time the last major newspaper in the USA to still have its website behind a paywall, until the New York Times reinstituted one on March 28, 2011. The Journal has almost one million paying online readers, which generates about $65 million a year.[45][47]
Recent extensions include the idea of a "soft" paywall, one that is relatively porous, with the New York Times version noted as "so porous that it can be considered to be a genuinely freemium model."[48] In such cases the difference between a paywall and a Freemium model disappears.
Utilities to circumvent paywalls are available. RefSpoof for Mozilla Firefox spoofs the referrer to Google so that multiple "first click free" links can be performed.[59] BreakthePaywall adds an option to Internet Explorer's context menu which uses various methods (referrer and user-agent spoofing, Cookie deletion).[60]