Citizen Journalism - Business Models: Difference between revisions
(Created page with " =Revenue Sharing Models= Some sites practice Revenue Sharing with producers of news articles. "Examples from an article in [At Scoopt, photographers receive 50% of the sel...") |
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=[[Revenue Sharing]] Models= | =[[Revenue Sharing]] Models= | ||
Some sites practice Revenue Sharing with producers of news articles. | Some [[Citizen Journalism]] sites practice Revenue Sharing with producers of news articles. | ||
"Examples from an article in [At Scoopt, photographers receive 50% of the selling price of their pictures, while ScooptWords shares 50% of the first sale and 75% of all subsequent sales with its writers/bloggers. ScoopLive shares 85% of revenues each time they license a contributor’s photo. SpyMedia pays an average of 100 USD per picture. | "Examples from an article in [At Scoopt, photographers receive 50% of the selling price of their pictures, while ScooptWords shares 50% of the first sale and 75% of all subsequent sales with its writers/bloggers. ScoopLive shares 85% of revenues each time they license a contributor’s photo. SpyMedia pays an average of 100 USD per picture. | ||
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[[Category:Business Models]] | [[Category:Business Models]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Collaborative Economy]] | ||
[[Category:Peerfunding]] | |||
Latest revision as of 07:26, 4 November 2013
Revenue Sharing Models
Some Citizen Journalism sites practice Revenue Sharing with producers of news articles.
"Examples from an article in [At Scoopt, photographers receive 50% of the selling price of their pictures, while ScooptWords shares 50% of the first sale and 75% of all subsequent sales with its writers/bloggers. ScoopLive shares 85% of revenues each time they license a contributor’s photo. SpyMedia pays an average of 100 USD per picture.
South African online newscaster Reporter has a more elaborate scheme: contributions are graded as Gold for homepage material, Silver for top placement on section pages, and Bronze for all other contributions, which carry a payment fee of R35, R20 and R15 per published contribution. South Korean OhMyNews pays 20,000 Korean won for a story published on its main page. A story published in a section (at the top) yields 10,000 Korean won." (http://trendwatching.com/trends/gen-cash.htm)