by Robert Merriam
It’s pretty hard to go anywhere on the internet without
seeing Ads. They pop up before you tube videos, hang about in the corners of
most web pages and suggest themselves to us on Facebook. And this isn't
surprising, advertising is the lifeblood of the internet it’s the thing that
has turned online media from a hobby to a viable career for millions of people.
Huffington Post, College Humour, Yahoo, Cracked, Facebook all of these sites
rely at least partially on Ad revenue to function. The same goes for the
entirety of the You tube community some of whom live solely off ad revenue. In
2013 internet advertising revenues reached $42.6 billion, a score to rival
television advertising. It is without a doubt quickest, easiest and most common
way to make money from content online but some fairly major problems seem to be
emerging.
Starting with YouTube. Their service ‘AdSense’ is what
allows you posting videos on their site to put Ads in front of their videos,
earning you money. However by agreeing to this you are allowing Google (You
Tubes owner) to take 32% of the profit from your videos, which is fair enough;
if you’re making money on their site it makes sense that they get a share and
if you don’t like it you can publish your content elsewhere... Except you
can’t. You tube is the third most visited site on the internet, no
other video sharing site comes anything like close to it. If you want to make a
living or even a hobby out of online video you pretty much have to do it
through You Tube. But if you’re starting out now it’s going to be really
difficult, much more so than it was a few years ago. Now that You Tube has its
celebrities with millions of guaranteed viewers the site pushes them to the
forefront gently diverting visitors to the site toward the biggest people on
it, because that is where the money is. The result is that what was a level
playing field where anyone could make it is now becoming a hierarchy in which
it is very hard to reach to the top, with the few who got there first reaping
the benefits and effectively closing the gate on the potential next generation.
And if you’re hoping to find success without Ads it’s even more hopeless as
you’ll be of no interest to You Tube financially, and can’t hope to be noticed.
But if you do happen to be a successful channel or site
with good income from Adverts on your content there is another issue. Say
hypothetically that your site is a news sight (a la Huffington Post) and 100%
of the Ads on your site are for Coca Cola. If you were to publish a story
exposing that Coca Cola is made of cockroaches and dirt Coca Cola would pull
the Ads from your site, meaning that you can’t make any money. In this situation
your independent, self made business basically belongs to Coca Cola because
they control your income and can cut it off at any point.
That is of course a gross over simplification but it is the
problem that arises when you rely on advertisers for a profit, your income is
made up of small payments from larger companies that can afford internet
advertising in essence making you a subsidiary of these huge co-operations.
This sullies the idea that the internet is a more free open place than the
mainstream media. Can we fully trust anyone that relies on advertising to put
their income on the line for a risky joke or a scandalous news story? Or that
the opinions they are expressing are theirs or that of a co-operation?
We are not yet at a stage where advertisers have this much
control but I do not think it is unrealistic to believe that they could in the
near future. The internet evolves at such a rate and at the moment it is
heading in a direction I don’t think I like. So is there an alternative? As
this article has probably made clear I’m not an expert in this field but I do
have a suggestion. What about paying for stuff? It makes sense, it's only until
very recently that we've come to expect free content, there are plenty of
people I would be happy to pay 0.2 pence per video to watch, especially if it
alleviates the possibility that they might be censoring themselves to appease
advertisers. Sites like Patreon allow viewers to fund content creators like
this and they have become more popular as content creators try to break out of
the confines of Ad dependency.
Either way it seems we may be at a crossroads for online
media, do we want it free at point of delivery or for our content creators to
be free to do what they wish.
Comments
Post a Comment
Comments with names are more likely to be published.