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9 votes
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Signal’s president Meredith Whittaker on what’s next for the private messaging app
8 votes -
Apple makes plans to move production out of China
14 votes -
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the company does not have plans to stop selling the antisemitic film that gained notoriety recently after Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving tweeted out an Amazon link to it
8 votes -
Elizabeth Holmes gets more than eleven years for Theranos scam
8 votes -
An idea how to monetize social software
I wrote the following as a Twitter thread first but I think this idea could work for Reddit/Tildes/Mastadon and would love to know what you folks think of it. Here is how I would monetize a social...
I wrote the following as a Twitter thread first but I think this idea could work for Reddit/Tildes/Mastadon and would love to know what you folks think of it.
Here is how I would monetize a social network that could work for Twitter.
First of all, don’t charge your most valuable users - the power users that create the content for you. Instead focus on the users that get more value from your system - the consumers of the content.
The idea is simple - introduce a small time delay before content gets seen from the time it is published. For example, on Twitter it could be 1 minute. On Reddit it could be 10 minutes.
Paid subscribers would have no delay. Importantly - lift the delay for the users that generate a lot of views.
You can do revenue share with your content creators in proportion to how much time paid subscribers spent on their content.
And you can also identify your most valuable audience - the paid subscribers. This will help prioritize content moderation decisions, identify abuse, and prioritize appeals.
The delay would allow you to prioritize which content needs to be indexed instantly (ie from creators that paid subscribers are following) and which you can process on a best effort basis - saving on production costs.
You can gift subscriptions to your friends and family.
7 votes -
Elon Musk bans remote work at Twitter, warns staff of “dire” economic outlook
16 votes -
Facebook parent company Meta will lay off 11,000 employees
14 votes -
First thing: Twitter sued by former staff as Elon Musk begins mass firing
15 votes -
Spotify is openly lashing out at Apple over a dispute that centers on the 30% App Store fee they charge for in-app digital services transactions
7 votes -
Twitter is planning to start charging $20 per month for verification. And if the employees building it don’t meet their deadline, they’ll be fired by Elon Musk.
27 votes -
Elon Musk has taken control of Twitter and fired its top executives
43 votes -
Welcome to hell, Elon - Nilay Patel on Elon's Twitter acquisition
35 votes -
YouTube should charge for 4K. Hear me out.
13 votes -
Kanye West is buying ‘free speech platform’ Parler
24 votes -
A history of ARM, part 1: Building the first chip
4 votes -
Reddit CEO Steve Huffman discusses how he wants every subreddit to be its own media company and he wants to see money being exchanged from users to users and users to subreddits
35 votes -
EVGA terminates NVIDIA partnership, cites disrespectful treatment
25 votes -
The day the US TV industry died
9 votes -
Adobe in final talks to acquire Figma for $20B USD
17 votes -
Bitwarden raises $100 million from PSG Equity
12 votes -
Amazon is acquiring iRobot
21 votes -
Red Hat's next steps, according to its new CEO and chairman
9 votes -
Food delivery drivers fired after ‘cut-price’ GPS app sent them on ‘impossible’ routes
8 votes -
Rogers CEO says service back online for most Canadian customers, blames outage on 'network system failure'
17 votes -
Elon Musk says he’s terminating $44bn Twitter buyout deal
26 votes -
TikTok turns on the money machine
8 votes -
Leaked Amazon memo warns the company is running out of people to hire. Unions might not be the tech giant’s biggest labor threat.
18 votes -
‘A mass invasion of privacy’ but no penalties for Tim Hortons
8 votes -
Broadcom announces plans to buy VMware in $61 billion deal
16 votes -
Northvolt and Norsk Hydro will take their battery recycling joint venture to Europe later this year after the Swedish start-up opened their first plant in Norway
5 votes -
Twitter accepts buyout, giving Elon Musk total control of the company
51 votes -
Elon Musk offers to buy Twitter outright for $41 billion
21 votes -
Elon Musk becomes Twitter’s largest shareholder
16 votes -
New York Times tech workers vote to certify union
19 votes -
Swedish price comparison firm PriceRunner is suing Alphabet-owned Google for promoting its own shopping comparisons in search results
4 votes -
Moxie Marlinspike stepping down as Signal CEO
9 votes -
LastPass is going to become an independent company
16 votes -
Reddit confidentially files to go public
28 votes -
Former Ubiquiti employee charged for data theft and attemtping to extort his employer
8 votes -
Vizio’s profit on ads, subscriptions, and data is double the money it makes selling TVs
22 votes -
Jack Dorsey resigns as Twitter CEO
@jack⚡️: not sure anyone has heard but,I resigned from Twitter pic.twitter.com/G5tUkSSxkl
20 votes -
Facebook changes name to Meta: Mark Zuckerberg announces company rebrand as it moves to the metaverse
30 votes -
Amazon copied products and rigged search results to promote its own brands, documents show
20 votes -
Imgur has been acquired by MediaLab (owner of Whisper, Kik, WorldStarHipHop, Amino, Genius, etc.)
26 votes -
Facebook paid FTC $4.9B more than required to shield Mark Zuckerberg, lawsuit alleges
11 votes -
The rise and ruin of Couchsurfing.com
10 votes -
Regulators and reality: The FTC's case against Facebook
5 votes -
Alphabet’s drone delivery service Wing hits 100,000 deliveries milestone
15 votes -
US FTC: Facebook was bad at business, so it “illegally bought or buried” competition
14 votes