Subscription can either be bought, or gifted to anyone. From the feedback we got, $20 USD per year (approximately $1.66 USD per month) would roughly be the right "sweet spot" for people.
Compared to the Other Site, the primary difference in subscriptions between us and them, is ours are time-based vs. usage based, and we're not offering early access to stories, or the +1 subscription pseudo-moderation. I thought fairly hard about this, and given the community feedback, simply because you do (or don't) pay for subscription does not make you a better or worse user. I also saw many people concerned that we were going to implement a "pay to post"-like system. Let me lay this down; we are NOT going to do this; this site exists for the community, and the principles I laid out in the manifesto clearly state "We will be the best site for independent, not-for-profit journalism on the internet, where ideas can be presented and free discussion can take place without external needs overshadowing the community." To require a user to go through a paywall, or have to financially contribute to this site to be an active proponent would fly in the face of that.How about for $10 you'll post an article of my choice clearly brightly identified as being sponsored by me and linked to my profile and comments are completely uncensored although any/all editors have full veto approval. $10 isn't high enough to push your moral/ethical boundaries (I hope) yet its high enough that "one" per day does add up to a couple grand per year, or the equivalent of thousands of subs. Would not want to see "ten" per day. "two" on a slow news day, eh maybe OK.
Sponsored content is something that has come up a few times in the past in discussing various revenue models. I'm not inherently against such a thing, but the other site fiddled with trying this, and essentially created a new form of slashverisment. Now, obviously with editorial and veto authority, we could limit such things, but I'm struggling to see what may get posted that we wouldn't already run. We could perhaps change the QA/Ask Soylent topic into "paid questions", and run those on occasion. I think the question to the broader community is, what forms of sponsored content would you like to be able to 1. purchase for yourself 2. be willing to tolerate.
My 2/100 of $1.00 USD by martyb
Separately, I like swag (especially coffee mugs). Make it limited edition by including the year or something in/on it. Maybe combine the two ideas? Pick your choice of swag and offer whatever donation you think it's worth.
Even better, offer a swag item that is unique to SN: a DVD or USB-stick which would boot up with a copy of the site as it now stands. For an extra 20%, it could even be autographed by the NCommander, himself. Soon to be a collector's item!
Swag is another good way we can raise money. I'd definitely be willing to create some sort of SN-on-a-stick w/ sanitized database which someone could purchase, stick in their computer, and pull up a local copy of SoylentNews in all its glory, as well as perhaps create some unique items (i.e., coffee cups, etc) available for sale. If its someone reasonable, I think we could look at selling it; ideas welcome below.
What About a Custom Slash Instance? by prospectacle
Who better to offer custom-slash-instance hosting?
While all users get a journal, paid users could get a virtualised slash instance, to run their own complete forum (a "super journal")
Bottom tier could have your own slash forum at username.soylentnews.com. A control panel could offer various simple customisations, such as colours, fonts, sidebar links, logos, etc.
More advanced (expensive) tiers could have more customisation options (use your own domain, control karma and mod-point settings, etc)
The most expensive tier would give the user a complete virtual machine with a full slash install, the ability to modify the slash source code (as well as use the simpler control-panel configurations), maybe a domain name is thrown in (chosen by the user, but organised and maintained by SN) or you can bring your own. Plus your own email/irc/wiki servers. Your "subscriber site" or whatever you would call it, could be linked to next to your name or sig, when posting to SN proper.
We've actually looked at doing something like this; there is partial support for this kind of functionality in slashcode already (the nexus feature, which is live on dev, and is pending a wildcard SSL cert before going live here. The intent is that once the feature was built out more, we could have a "sub-slash" system (conceptually similar to sub-reddits), in which users could follow various nexuses on any topic, and users could create their own (possibly paying a one-time cost to do so), either existing as nexus.soylentnews.org, or perhaps with their own custom domain name.
Functionality wise, we're still quite a ways out from implementing this (most of the admin code would require re-factoring to make it fly), but it would allow users to create their own communities within SN, i.e., a community dedicated to DIY, or one dedicated to minecraft or gaming), each with its own staff overseeing it, and the ability to submit any article to the main page.
(Score: 2) by NCommander on Thursday June 26 2014, @05:31PM
Taking points from the top:
Tip-jars/badges: Huh, I guess we could do this.
Subscriptions are one-time as implemented. I think the current code fires a reminder email off when they run low.
Professional look: reddit disagrees with you, as does Google. They just have small boxes for "sponsored" content, not huge ad banners.
Sponsored article: Maybe, will think on it
Promotional Item: Sure, why not :-)
Still always moving
(Score: 2) by frojack on Thursday June 26 2014, @07:11PM
Was going to post this as a separate reply, but here seems as good a place as any....
Hosting Google AdSense [google.com] ads, (small text ads would seem to be the best fit) below the navigation sidebars on stories seems a good way to host ads when and if you decide to do so.
If you choose the Contextual targeting option, the ads will tie into stories, and some times this can be useful, and other times it can be quite comical, and most times it is innocuous, and seems not to slow page loading at all.
It eliminates your staff's responsibility to deal with advertisers, ad content, billing, etc. All you need is add a standard google supplied squib of code in your page template.
Downside: story content gets scanned by Google's ad engine so that it can put contextual based ads in the boxes.
Full disclosure, I use this method to cover costs on a couple of small sites I maintain, and it is totally painless. I put it in the template years ago, and I get a check from Google every once in a while, even from low volume specialized interest sites.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
(Score: 2) by NCommander on Thursday June 26 2014, @09:07PM
Google is what caused problems for TVTropes so I'm concerned they may get upset if anything NSFW (even comments) get posted to the site. Furthermore, I suspect a large portion of the user base would be upset w/ Google tracking. The only sort of tracking we do is piWik, and there were more than a few comments sad that our ghostly score was no longer zero.
Still always moving
(Score: 2) by Open4D on Thursday June 26 2014, @08:59PM
If the problem is what to allow instead of donations then here's another idea to add to the list:
Create a page www.soylentnews.org/promoted-messages.html and have a link to it from the main page. Anyone can pay to have their commercial or philosophical message promoted there.
Commercial messages are submitted (in plain text, or maybe allow some markup) for approval first, before payment details are taken.
The "philosophical" messages (along with less high-brow ones) are selected from a drop-down list, e.g.:
The promoter can choose how much they want to pay, and that will translate into how long the message remains on the page.
(Score: 2) by lhsi on Thursday June 26 2014, @10:03PM
Have you thought about setting up a patreon? http://www.patreon.com/ [patreon.com]
A kickstarter seems to be for a big initial fund raising, whereas patreon is more for continuous creation of something. You could set one up for original journalistic articles.
The basics of it is supporters pledge an amount set by them which is collected whenever you produce something predefined (for example, a song for musicians), with I think some monthly limits. You then set levels that improve the content that is based on total amount collected, as well as having perks set for individual pledges.
This is an example from the first project I heard about the site from: http://www.patreon.com/misterorange [patreon.com]
The creator is creating a video series covering the history of each set of Magic: the Gathering. At time of writing, he has 62 patreons (supporters) who in total have pledged $422 per episode of this series he produces. He has milestones of $500 per episode which means no ads on the YouTube videos, and $1000 per episode for longer videos. Individual perks include early access if you pledge $1 per episode, or having your name in the credits of you pledge $5 per episode.
To apply it to Soylent News, you could ask for pledges to produce a original article of content. If the total pledges reach a certain amount, you can up the minimum word count for each article, or hire an expert to write something in depth.
With this you can allow people to "donate" without actually donating as they are paying you for producing something. The pledge is set by the pledger so not a fixed value; someone can pledge more if they wish. On patreon you can start and stop pledges whenever you like, so someone can do it as a one off if they would rather that. And you can define something concrete that will add value to the site, instead of trying to think up perks to give people.
(Score: 2) by NCommander on Thursday June 26 2014, @10:06PM
Never heard of it before, will look into it.
Still always moving
(Score: 2) by VLM on Sunday June 29 2014, @02:37PM
"Sponsored article: Maybe, will think on it"
Having been the primary pusher for the idea I'm sad I was on vacation when it was discussed, hopefully not too late.
Note there's two totally separate classes of sponsorship, there's private and public.
I can write a nice article about the ARRL EME (earth moon earth) annual radio contest which would be totally cool, nerdy, geeky, techie whatever yet because it (it as in ham radio, analog RF, moon bounce communication) is not in the echo chamber, I'll bet $10 it won't get past the mods and show up. Yet I could pay $10 to guarantee it shows up. And only $10 is not enough to be a bribe that can't be refused if its some pure spam. Think of it as "preferential handling" or "first class shipping fee" not advertising. I don't wanna pay the $10 unless it runs.
I can think of plenty other cool techie / nerdy / science stories like about half of astrobites and some other things, all just barely outside the echo chamber where it would be of benefit to include them. I guarantee if the Arduino project releases a new board it'll make the cut without pay, but I'd need to pay or generate a grassroots campaign or something if TI releases an equally cool dev board. On topic stuff. And if not, you're only turning down $10 so don't feel pressured.
Probably a good rule of thumb is if you can't figure out who's making any money, its in this class of on topic non-echo chamber subject and is probably fair to approve. "Here's an interesting hobby tangentially related to what is always talked about here"
The other kind of sponsored article is the pure spam stuff. So Bank of America wants to announce home equity loans or some BS like that. Or the new Nobody-gives-a-F phone has been released, now with 10% more BS and 30% more bloatware apps. Whatever. Don't much care to read those. If you're going to run that kind of garbage at least make a lot of money off it and charge them like $5000 a pop so you don't have to run many of them.
A good rule of thumb is its in this market segment if someone's trying to make a buck off the story running.
Two totally different marketplaces DO exist.