In this week’s New York Magazine, James J. Cramer proposes that the New York Times disband as we know it and go online to challenge Google.
There’s one way out of this mess for the Times. It is a bold, gutsy, and, some would say, foolish way, at least initially: The Times—here’s the irony—should go all-digital. That’s right. It should abandon newsprint and force everyone to the Web. It should make a stand against Google, using its About.com division … to lead the way. Maybe it should even take the revolutionary step of blocking Google from accessing its content, something no one else is willing to do. Or maybe it should at least say, “This is the deal: You want our stuff, you must share much more with us than you are willing to share with others.” It is worth it to preserve value for the future, to make it so our kids don’t think, Let me go to Google for all the news that’s fit to print. Heck, in another couple of years they won’t even know that the New York Times exists as anything but private-label news source for an Internet portal.
For true NYT fans who want more, read a good review of the Times’ recent website redesign at Six Apart.
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[ cramer.jpg] In this week’s New York Magazine, James J. Cramer proposes that the New York Times disband as we know it and go online to challenge Google … abandon newsprint and force everyone to the Web. It should make a stand against Google, using…