Originally published: June 14, 2010
Last updated: June 14, 2010 - 9:14pm
[Commentary] Advise to the Federal Trade Commission: First, direct subsidies for journalism are the wrong way to go, even dangerous. But we absolutely could use the kind of indirect help -- taxpayer-funded deployment of high-capacity, wide-open broadband networks -- that would be an analogue to the early American postal subsidies, and then some. This would be essential infrastructure, aimed at beefing up all 21st Century commerce and communications, including but not limited to journalism.
Second, if we got serious about broadband in this way, entrepreneurs would almost certainly come up with the journalism, including a variety of business models to augment or replace today's, that would provide the public good we all agree comes with journalism and other trustworthy information. To be fair, some of the subsidy advocates say they don't want to prop up newspapers per se, though some of their remedies would do just that; others are less shy, and their explicit goal is to save newspapers.
I love newspapers. I worked in them for almost 25 years. But I'm not itching to bail out a business that is failing in large part because it was so transcendentally greedy in its monopoly era that it passed on every opportunity to survive against real financial competition. With a few exceptions, the newspaper industry essentially deserves to die at this point.
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Lawmakers Keep Expenses Off-Line
- Millions in Colorado phone subsidies doled out in error
- Hospitals becoming wireless hotbeds
- Subsidies, Not Consolidation, Will Save TV
- Unlicensed To Kill DTV?
- Perils of an online piracy law
- Broadband funds stimulate laments from companies
- Young Adults Are Giving Newspapers Scant Notice
- The Universal Service Fund: What Do High-Cost Subsides Subsidize?
- Online news organizations refuse to disclose diversity numbers
- A Wide-Open Web for the '08 Campaign
- NCTA Comments on FCC's Role in Broadband Stimulus Program
- Today's Quote 10.03.07
- No More Taxpayer-Funded Municipal Networks, Says Group
- The Default Choice, So Hard to Resist
Topics
Related Events
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

