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    Categories: MediaShift PodcastNewspaperShift

Mediatwits #48: Yahoo CEO Under Fire; Pros and Cons of Metered Pay Walls

Welcome to the 48th episode of the Mediatwits podcast, with Mark Glaser and the Rafat Ali as co-hosts. On this show, we turn to the chaotic soap opera that continues at Yahoo, once an Internet darling on its umpteenth remake. Its new CEO Scott Thompson appears to have padded his bio with a computer science degree that he never received. An activist investor found the “mistake” and our special guest Kara Swisher of AllThingsD has been on this story all week with updates. She talks about possible successors for Thompson and also gives the skinny on the upcoming 10th edition of the D conference.

Next up is the ever lovable debate on pay walls and paid content online. When we approached Gawker honcho Nick Denton about the subject, he said, “Pay wall discussions make me want to blow my brains out.” Be that as it may, we ended up having a lively debate between Steven Brill, creator of CourtTV and American Lawyer magazine and current co-CEO of Press+, and Mike Masnick, who runs the TechDirt blog and community. Brill says that Press+ could be running metered pay walls for up to 1,000 publications by the end of the year, while Masnick says that keeping content free and sharable is the best way to stay relevant online.

Check it out!

mediatwits48.mp3

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Intro and outro music by 3 Feet Up; mid-podcast music by Autumn Eyes via Mevio’s Music Alley.

Here are some highlighted topics from the show:

Kara Swisher

Intro

0:30: Rafat prepping for launch of new startup, Skift

2:40: Comcast fights back against cord-cutters

3:30: NBC will have streams of Olympic games online, but you need to have cable, satellite subscriptions to watch

6:40: Rundown of stories on podcast

Yahoo CEO under fire

7:40: Special guest Kara Swisher

9:45: Swisher: A lot of people would have been fired at Yahoo if they did what he did

12:20: Thompson could have corrected bio many times but never did

Steven Brill

15:20: Swisher: Vetting process was shoddy at Yahoo

17:10: Highlights for the upcoming D conference include an interview with Apple CEO Tim Cook

Future of online paid content

18:50: Special guests Steven Brill and Mike Masnick

20:20: Brill: Never in history has a journalistic venture been profitable giving its content away free

22:40: Rafat: The answer is somewhere in the middle, with multiple revenue streams

24:00: Masnick: There’s a mental cost to putting up metered walls

27:10: Brill: My book would have done better if the publisher gave it away free

Mike Masnick

29:10: Masnick: TechDirt has been exceptionally profitable with membership and advertising model

32:40: Brill: Publishers have hit a wall with their business model

36:40: Brill: Google never really put enough resources into One Pass, didn’t offer bundle of print and digital subscriptions

More Reading

7 ways Comcast is killing the cable killers at GigaOm

NBC Will Stream The London Olympics Live — But Only To TV Subscribers at NPR

Not So Scott Free? Yahoo’s Other Big Shareholder — Cap Re — Leaning Toward Supporting Loeb Over Thompson ResuMess at AllThingsD

They Shoot Yahoo CEOs, Don’t They? But Not Without a Really Smoking Gun and a Much Stronger Board at AllThingsD

Yahoo CEO didn’t have to get Minkowed at MarketWatch

The Newsonomics of Pricing 101 at Wired

Why It’s a Bad Idea for Student Press to Fall in Love with Pay Walls at MediaShift

Press+ positioning itself to target Google One Pass customers at Journalism.co.uk

Ongo, an attempt at a pan-media paywalled aggregator, is closing at Nieman Lab

The Great Debate on Micropayments and Paid Content, Part 1 at MediaShift

Weekly Poll

Don’t forget to vote in our weekly poll, this time about your philosophy on paid content:

Mark Glaser is executive editor of MediaShift and Idea Lab. He also writes the bi-weekly OPA Intelligence Report email newsletter for the Online Publishers Association. He lives in San Francisco with his son Julian. You can follow him on Twitter @mediatwit. and Circle him on Google+

Mark Glaser :Mark Glaser is founder and executive director of MediaShift. He contributes regularly to Digital Content Next’s InContext site and newsletter. Glaser is a longtime freelance journalist whose career includes columns on hip-hop, reviews of videogames, travel stories, and humor columns that poked fun at the titans of technology. From 2001 to 2005, he wrote a weekly column for USC Annenberg School of Communication's Online Journalism Review. Glaser has written essays for Harvard's Nieman Reports and the website for the Yale Center for Globalization. Glaser has written columns on the Internet and technology for the Los Angeles Times, CNET and HotWired, and has written features for the New York Times, Conde Nast Traveler, Entertainment Weekly, the San Jose Mercury News, and many other publications. He was the lead writer for the Industry Standard's award-winning "Media Grok" daily email newsletter during the dot-com heyday, and was named a finalist for a 2004 Online Journalism Award in the Online Commentary category for his OJR column. Glaser won the Innovation Journalism Award in 2010 from the Stanford Center for Innovation and Communication. Glaser received a Bachelor of Journalism and Bachelor of Arts in English at the University of Missouri at Columbia, and currently lives in San Francisco with his wife Renee and his two sons, Julian and Everett. Glaser has been a guest on PBS' "Newshour," NPR's "Talk of the Nation," KALW's "Media Roundtable" and TechTV's "Silicon Spin." He has given keynote speeches at Independent Television Service's (ITVS) Diversity Retreat and the College Media Assocation's national convention. He has been part of the lecture/concert series at Yale Law School and Arkansas State University, and has moderated many industry panels. He spoke in May 2013 to the Maui Business Brainstormers about the "Digital Media Revolution." To inquire about speaking opportunities, please use the site's Contact Form.

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