Slashdot
Posted Sep 29, 2005 7:34 UTC (Thu) by
komarek (guest, #7295)
In reply to:
Slashdot by stefie10
Parent article:
An LWN status update
Coordinating with Rob was something on my mind, too. Maybe allow slashdot subscribers to travel from slashdot links to *certain* lwn content, when relevant. Because those people are slashdot subscribers, I would guess they are more likely to be willing to subscribe to lwn than a random sample.
I started reading The Reg because of slashdot, and I probably started reading LWN for the same reason. I rarely read slashdot anymore, but I pay at the "project leader" level for LWN (even when I'm too busy to read it for many weeks in a row).
One idea that hitchhikes on other commentors' ideas: When I want to send a subscription-only link to a friend, I may be willing to pay for the privilege. This would be something like a gift subscription.
Example:
I find an article I want to forward.
I click on "sponsor article to email address"
I enter email addr, and consent to micropayment by clicking "send"
A special link to the article appears in friend's mailbox
When friend clicks that link, my "account" is charged the micropayment
Notes:
* In order to keep credit card processing fees down, LWN could aggregate micropayments for some period. Or I could buy credits in advance, like those obnoxious college campus dining cards.
* The micropayment amount could change, according to age of article, length of article, or Jon's estimation of how much work went into the article. Multiple rates could be allowed, using radio buttons, with the default radio button set according to your subscription level.
* Sending a special link seems better than sending the article text, since it will draw the reader to the site. The email might also include
- the title of the article
- maybe first paragraph (or other auto-summary)
- optional guilt-statement (from sender): "This link broght to you by the generosity of X, who paid for you to read this subscription-only article"
-- Note: on the last idea, we should be careful not to make the recipient feel guilty and choose not to read the article.
* I'd prefer to be charged only for links that were "used", that is, the recipient successfully loads the linked page. Sometimes a friend might not have time to read the article, and there are many other reasons, too (let's not get into gift-card situations).
Well, I'm hoping Jon Corbet is still reading these threads, because I personally want the feature I've just described. For some friends, I'd probably spend more money this way during a year, than I would if I bought them a gift subscription.
-Paul Komarek
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