This one weird trick can make online publishing faster, safer, more attractive, and richer
- Reference: 1742200751
- News link: https://www.theregister.co.uk/2025/03/17/universe_today_opinion/
- Source link:
This universe, in particular, is Universe Today, a space news website a good quarter-century old published by Fraser Cain. Over that time, it has sprouted podcasts and a YouTube channel with nearly half a million subscribers. It has a team of expert writers and production staff, runs interviews with actual researchers about all manner of space science and events, and is highly regarded. In short, it's doing the sort of science journalism that seems most under threat in today's turgid political and anti-factual times. It is a very good thing.
Or it was until a couple of Mondays ago, when the website, still the hub of the enterprise, went down and would not come up. There were backups. They did not work. There were secondary backups. Those neither. The only option was to rebuild the site from scratch and repopulate it from the content database and the image files hosted on the web server. As [1]Cain recounts , this took a string of 16-hour days. The site ran on WordPress with the usual commercial trimmings to support advertisers and sponsors, because Universe Today has depended on the website advertising revenue for its entire existence.
[2]
But during the long slog to get the site up again, Cain realized that this was not the way the universe should evolve. Over the past four years or so, advertising revenue had shrunk by about 90 percent. Some of the gap had been picked up by the very lightly monetized YouTube videos, but of late the Patreon model had done most of the work. With no sign that the trends would change, quite the reverse, what if Universe Today just walked away from advertising on its main site?
[3]
[4]
Out went WordPress. In came pure static pages. Out went all the tracking and cookies. In came ... nothing. From a technical aspect, the new site was a tremendous success, with pages served in single-digit milliseconds instead of the many hundreds needed previously. The site codebase was a tenth of the size of the old installation. As for user experience, all they got was pure content delivered nearly instantaneously. You can see for yourself. It's a simple site anyway that does the job of serving space news. It doesn't even have search, but use of site:universetoday.com as part of a Google search term does the job just fine. At least Google is still good for something.
It's also good for choking the last remaining life from ad revenue supported sites. Its AI, and that of others, is being wired to promote, sometimes exclusively present, summaries of content instead of links to it, meaning content generators get no traffic and no advertising cash at all. At the same time, AI slop is being poured into cyberspace with the enthusiasm of a thousand supernovae. Near-nonsense written by LLMs asked to replicate the form of content most appetizing to search already soaks up many of the clicks that get through the AI-generated summary at the top of the page. Soon it will soak up more.
[5]
At this point, adtech can be considered malware. It loads the user with hard-to-manage tracking, sucks resources it doesn't pay for from users and providers alike, and presents huge bundles of JavaScript doing who knows what. Imagine if you were caught doing this? The argument that ad revenue is necessary to fund services falls flat when you look at the surviving providers who benefit most, and those for whom it barely suffices.
Can Patreon and others like it really replace the adtech behemoths? Won't people's love of free content and lack of loyalty result in thousands of freeloaders for every paying customer? To some extent, that doesn't matter even if it's true as the same economics of electronic distribution work as well for a publisher as for spammers. Good engineering that understands the readership's motivations and composition is essential, but in-depth understanding of, respect for, and empathy with the readership is needed for success whatever your business model. Plus, if your product is undeniably superior, more secure, and gives a better experience, that's a lot of attributes to build a brand that can survive in a hostile environment.
[6]Governments can't seem to stop asking for secret backdoors
[7]Microsoft starts boiling the Copilot frog: It's not a soup you want to drink at any price
[8]Upgrading Linux with Rust looks like a new challenge. It's one of our oldest
[9]Fragile Agile development model is a symptom, not a source, of project failure
That's the flip side of the equation. Publishers talk of existential crises as what little ad revenue they can muster keeps soaking into the sand. But the adtech-driven environment faces its own existential crisis, one where it no longer fulfills even the lowest levels of acceptable experiences for those it can't automate away – the users. Us. The ones who curse after ten useless links, or demands for money from sites that will still throw ad chicanery at us even if we cough up. You can't keep dumping toxins into the environment and expect your food chain to carry on regardless.
How well Universe Today will prosper without ads remains unanswered, and even if it does then that's just one data point. Patreon and the model behind it aren't perfect. It can work very well case by case but there's no sense of ensuring a consistently better experience. That's up to the content providers who use it. As the ad-supported world degenerates like a dying cuttlefish, though, a way of marking oneself as a member of a mutual quality club would be the beginning of a new ecosystem that could thrive on the ashes of the old. That this will happen one day is guaranteed. The universe is like that. ®
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[1] https://youtu.be/H0uKlAHcUGk?si=qJpEb-X0HXnPCs1r
[2] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/front&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=2&c=2Z9gA1x54Ytz0ztFCF7WEiQAAAAY&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D2%26raptor%3Dcondor%26pos%3Dtop%26test%3D0
[3] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/front&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=4&c=44Z9gA1x54Ytz0ztFCF7WEiQAAAAY&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D4%26raptor%3Dfalcon%26pos%3Dmid%26test%3D0
[4] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/front&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=3&c=33Z9gA1x54Ytz0ztFCF7WEiQAAAAY&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D3%26raptor%3Deagle%26pos%3Dmid%26test%3D0
[5] https://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/jump?co=1&iu=/6978/reg_software/front&sz=300x50%7C300x100%7C300x250%7C300x251%7C300x252%7C300x600%7C300x601&tile=4&c=44Z9gA1x54Ytz0ztFCF7WEiQAAAAY&t=ct%3Dns%26unitnum%3D4%26raptor%3Dfalcon%26pos%3Dmid%26test%3D0
[6] https://www.theregister.com/2025/03/03/opinion_e2ee/
[7] https://www.theregister.com/2024/11/18/opinion_piece_ai_tools/
[8] https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/09/opinion_column_rust_linux/
[9] https://www.theregister.com/2024/06/10/agile_opinion_column/
[10] https://whitepapers.theregister.com/
Plain look
The plain look is so refreshing and it loads instantly! Hope they survive
Did they work out what caused the unrecoverable crash? Was the WordPress and its many add-ons so badly coded/setup?
So refreshing
Static Web pages load so fast. I've chipped in for a year to see how it goes.
"top item on Betelgeuse takes you to a 404 page" yup from UK at 09:32 UT.
How much?
I love the idea that people pay for the content they want without ads and tracking, but I wonder if £3 a month is just a little steep to attract sufficient volume (and there's no micropayment option for casual visitors). Looking at Press Gazette analysis, once you get to the bottom end of the top 50 global subscription sites they're around 100,000 subscriptions - and that's for globally known publications, plus a few title aggregators like Hearst Newpapers, Ganett and Newsquest. Between these top 50, they have a paltry 45m subscribers. Which tells me most people - most of whom happily paid for hard copy magazines back in the day - still aren't comfortable paying for digital content, and in my view that's because the price/benefit balance is wildly wrong. I don't think a patron model is the way forward - it'll be like Wikipedia or the Guardian, where a tiny minority support the majority who won't pay, and then we all end up with regular begging appeals, and a precarious existence for the publication.
So, throwing the floor open, what would you pay if the Reg was ad-free behind a paywall? I'd give them a tenner a year, which I suspect is a lot more than they currently get per regular viewer*. They'd need some offer to drag in new subscribers, or a micropayment offer
* And considerably more than they get from me as I'm running ad-blockers, purely because the ad industry has got out of hand with it's tracking, privacy invasions, and the sheer intrusiveness of their garbage adverts. I know the Reg isn't as bad as say Reach, but the ad industry have thrown themselves over the edge, and I'm not going to save them.
April 1 Julian Calendar?
Out went WordPress. In came pure static pages. Out went all the tracking and cookies. In came ... nothing.
Reads like a Brothers Grimm fairy tale, "Once upon a time, in far away land...."
Possibly, just possibly when media enshittification reaches totality a reset will mean writers producing high quality, well researched relevant copy will be worth paying for. While the almost monopolistic media concentration persists there is zero likelihood of any change from that quarter. Smaller highly focused media might well emerge offering some improvement on the current shite if a viable business model existed.
AI generated content might ironically be the the straw that breaks the camel's back. Even at its least worst AI content is inaccurate and misleading.
As an example when reading English stories written in the 1920s I often encountered references to £1 (and 10/-) treasury notes with Bank of England £5 etc notes and recently my curiosity got the better of me and I searched it from my e-reader. The google AI generated summary confidently asserted the treasury notes were issued by the US Treasury. Bollocks. A short PDF [1]The Bank of England Note: A Short History from the Bank itself clarifies.
[1] https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/-/media/boe/files/quarterly-bulletin/1969/the-boe-note-a-short-history.pdf
At this point, adtech can be considered malware
I am in front of the pack. I have always considered it malware.
I wish them well, but right now (0900UT on St Paddy's Day) the top item on Betelgeuse takes you to a 404 page.