- Joined
- Apr 30, 2005
- Messages
- 34,489
I don't.
I used to be able to see all the content on the top news sources free.
Now, since I'm not a subscriber, I get to see only maybe 10 articles per month, if that.
I'm considering paying for what I formerly enjoyed for free.
Of course nothing is free; actually it is/was paid for by ads that I had to look at, and I suspect by the new source collecting my personal surfing data (and perhaps even the content of my emails) and selling it to advertisers.
When online stuff seems free YOU are actually the product being sold.
If I subscribe to pubs like LA Times, NT Times, Forbes, Wall Street Journal will I see no ads?
Are there levels of payment/subscription ... as in, pay more to see fewer or even no ads?
Do they collect and sell my personal info and surfing habits to others?
For instance, if I read or search for articles on skiing will I suddenly see ads for skiing when I'm on other sites or, even worse, get spam email about skiing?
The main reason I haven't subscribed is not the cost.
It's the perceived loss of privacy, and exploitation by this bold new Facebook-World of becoming the product when I just want to be the customer.
Fortunately NPR is still free.
My main go-to, BBC, is still free but they leave many stories up for days or even weeks, yes and some stories have been up for months.
I wonder whether subscription-only sites have more and fresher content.
I used to be able to see all the content on the top news sources free.
Now, since I'm not a subscriber, I get to see only maybe 10 articles per month, if that.
I'm considering paying for what I formerly enjoyed for free.
Of course nothing is free; actually it is/was paid for by ads that I had to look at, and I suspect by the new source collecting my personal surfing data (and perhaps even the content of my emails) and selling it to advertisers.
When online stuff seems free YOU are actually the product being sold.
If I subscribe to pubs like LA Times, NT Times, Forbes, Wall Street Journal will I see no ads?
Are there levels of payment/subscription ... as in, pay more to see fewer or even no ads?
Do they collect and sell my personal info and surfing habits to others?
For instance, if I read or search for articles on skiing will I suddenly see ads for skiing when I'm on other sites or, even worse, get spam email about skiing?
The main reason I haven't subscribed is not the cost.
It's the perceived loss of privacy, and exploitation by this bold new Facebook-World of becoming the product when I just want to be the customer.
Fortunately NPR is still free.
My main go-to, BBC, is still free but they leave many stories up for days or even weeks, yes and some stories have been up for months.
I wonder whether subscription-only sites have more and fresher content.