Poynter’s Steve Outing covered the New York Times move to a hybrid paywall model in Editor & Publisher last week. I mostly agree with half of his analysis: it’s likely worth US$50 to access the Times’ archive (only from 1981 on) for some. But putting the columnists—Outing calls them the paper’s crown jewels—behind the paywall is a big mistake.
The Times is doing nothing short of abdicating it’s information authority.
Outing confirms his grasp of at least part of the information authority bit today in his E-Media Tidbits article, “NYT Op-ed Columnists Locked Down Tight”:
“I must say, it’s disturbing to see some of my favorite columnists vanish except for a single website. (I did purchase a TimesSelect subscription.) While I think that enough people will sign up for TimesSelect for the Times to make some decent money, I fear that the paper’s influence—led by its most known writers who have had worldwide reach—will wane.”
