• Eiri@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago

    Servers and bandwidth aren’t free. Someone needs to pay for it. There are roughly seven ways to fund a website:

    • Complete volunteering, and maintainer pays all fees out of pocket. Only makes sense for very small projects, or when the maintainer is rich and has a great deal of passion or otherwise self-interest in the project.
    • Strictly fund the website with donations. That’s more or less how Wikipedia works. It can be hard to make ends meet, and it typically only works if your website basically offers community service like a charity or if you have very passionate users.
    • Freemium model: most users are just leeches and are subsidized by the few who pay for the premium version. This is more or less how free-to-play video games work, and some newspapers survive this way. It can be difficult to convince people.
    • Members only: you literally cannot use the website unless you pay. A lot of SAAS websites, especially for businesses, work this way. It can be a hard sell for a lot of service categories.
    • Ads. Sometimes combined with a freemium model, where you can pay to remove the ads. YouTube works this way.
    • Sell user data to advertisers or more sinister entities. Only possible if you have valuable user data to sell. Most social networks get a significant portion of their revenue from this method, but they typically combine it with ads.
    • Use venture capital to disturb an existing market at a loss, get massive mindshare and maybe even kill existing competition, and jack the prices up to repay your debts and turn a profit once you have customers and the market is more favourable. Airbnb works this way.

    What would you do for review sites? News sites? Video game wikis?

    Wouldn’t it suck if a wiki for an old game was just gone because there aren’t many players anymore, and now you just can’t access the info in it?

      • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        That would work for projects important enough to be worth the government’s attention. But we don’t want every small project ever to be dependent on that.

        Do you really see some teenager trying to meet a civil servant to explain how their Super Random RPG 2025 wiki is worth it, and the project is finally accepted (or refused, because the civil servant isn’t too hot about giving government money to something about video games) half a year later, when the most intense players, who would have contributed to such a platform a lot, have already finished the game?

        I absolutely like that idea and I think it could be great for big sites like Wikipedia and various Internet Archive projects.

        But I really don’t think it solves everything.