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Internet May Spell
End Of Newspaper
http://www.catholicregister.org/content/view/1740/852/
Written by John Bentley Mays - Thursday, 17 April 2008
The North American newspaper is a wonderful thing.
Since its rise some 300 years ago, this medium has
helped build civil society and advance democracy. It
has linked people together over the vast distances of
the continent, and it has provided these people with
the facts about what is happening in the world, and
why.
Because I believe papers are building-blocks of
freedom — whether big and general, like, say, The
Globe and Mail, or small and specialized, like The
Catholic Register — I find the hand-wringing over the
future of print journalism to be an ominous sign of
the times.
Almost all the news from the U.S. newspaper industry
is bad. In a recent New Yorker article, media analyst
Eric Alterman reports that independent American
newspapers have lost 42 per cent of their market value
in the last three years. “Most managers in the
industry have reacted to the collapse of their
business model with a spiral of budget cuts, bureau
closings, buyouts, layoffs and reductions in page size
and column inches,” Alterman says. “Since 1990, a
quarter of all American newspaper jobs have
disappeared... Only 19 per cent of Americans between
the ages of 18 and 34 claim to even to look at a daily
newspaper. The average age of the American newspaper
reader is 55 and rising.”
Viewed against this picture of impending doom, the
health of Canadian papers seems downright rosy. A
study released in April by the Canadian Newspaper
Association (CNA) showed that 2007 revenue for daily
papers in this country dropped less than one per cent
from the previous year. But the most significant
figures in the CNA report, at least if we’re trying to
get a sense of long-term trends, have to do with
online advertising. The small 2.4-per-cent fall-off in
Canadian print ads was offset by a whopping
29-per-cent one-year increase in Internet advertising.
In the United States, the online gain was 18.8 per
cent. If advertisers are abandoning the print editions
of newspapers, we know where they are headed: the
Internet.
It doesn’t take a degree in journalism to see where
these numbers are taking us: to the eventual death of
print media altogether and the rebirth of the
newspaper as a site in cyberspace. So why should
Catholics be interested in the way this story turns
out?
Here’s why. The Catholic Church calls us to be
vigilant about the quality and veracity of
communication in print, electronic, visual and all
other media. We are to concern ourselves about freedom
of the press. But we are also summoned to be concerned
about the freedom of people to get news, opinion and
commentary.
It’s with regard to this last point that I have a
problem with the transformation of traditional print
media into so much Internet blogging. Though the price
has gone up in recent years, a daily newspaper in
Canada is still astonishingly cheap, hence accessible
to readers with very little money. The web sites of
most dailies — at least so far — are free, but getting
to these sites is not. One has to pay for a computer
and an Internet service provider, and, through user
fees, for the construction and maintenance of an
enormously complex and expensive network of electronic
equipment, cables, telephone connections and such.
Of course, many Canadians, and most people in the
other affluent countries of the transatlantic world,
are happy to pony up for the technology and services
necessary to have access to the Internet. But is
first-class news to be the property only of
middle-class electronics’ consumers? The information
society, if there is to be one, must be something
everyone can engage in or the whole idea is nonsense.
And at the present time, the only first-rate news
medium that is genuinely available to every Canadian
who can read English or French, without exception, is
the old print-edition newspaper.
Like many readers of this column, I suspect, I value
the Internet and believe in its enormous promise as a
vector of truth and information. It is surely only a
matter of time before a workable, widely applicable
financial model for Internet advertising emerges. But
while encouraging the web’s promise to unfold, we
Catholics need to be keenly aware of both the benefits
and the inevitable downsides of the cybernetic
revolution. |