How do you save newspapers from this instant-access online news cycle? One journalist/lawyer (now there's an unholy hybrid) thinks he has the answer:

What to do? Here's my proposal: Newspapers and wire services need to figure out a way, without running afoul of antitrust laws, to agree to embargo their news content from the free Internet for a brief period -- say, 24 hours -- after it is made available to paying customers. The point is not to remove content from the Internet, but to delay its free release in that venue.

A temporary embargo, by depriving the Internet of free, trustworthy news in real-time, would, I believe, quickly establish the true value of that information. Imagine the major Web portals -- Yahoo, Google, AOL and MSN -- with nothing to offer in the category of news except out of date articles from "mainstream" media and blogosphere musings on yesterday's news. Digital fish wrap. And the portals know from unhappy experience (most recently in the case of Yahoo) just how difficult it is to create original and timely news content themselves.


Yes, let's bleed the Internet dry of its most appealing feature. It's both impractical and probably illegal. Someone's not thinking this series-of-tubes thing too clearly.
The Pittsburg State University Gorillas have accepted a bid to the Mineral Water Bowl in Excelsior Springs, Missouri, against Bemidji State University.

I swear I am making none of that up.

At any rate, 36 pics below.... )
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