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Substack invites newsletter writers to invest
The immediate response I saw to this was scepticism. After all, newsletter writers are very rarely flush with investor-level cash reserves, and they already do pay Substack a proportion of the revenue they make from subscribers. But, in the light of my recent interview with its head of writer partnerships Farrah Storr, let’s take a look at the details and see how this will work out:
First and foremost, the minimum investment is $100 so it’s not outside the realms of possibility for many newsletter writers. The expansion of the scheme is technically an extension of the company’s $65 million series B raised 2021, a source confirmed to Axios and the goal, according to its community fundraising page, is $2 million. As of Monday evening it had already raised $194,300.
I love the idea of a collective of writers being shared owners of a platform like Substack, but with VC companies making up the majority of its funders, the possibility of that shared ownership is limited. However, as Storr said in our interview, anything that enables writers to work on stories that matter to them and their readers without the fickle nature of ad-funding has to be a good thing.
Google is adding perspective and author info to search results
So while Twitter is stripping verification and context away, Google is adding it. The company is adding two new features to its search results designed to help users have confidence in the results. One will provide information about the post’s author, including other things they’ve written, while the ‘Perspectives’ is a carousel that provides a range of results from “a variety” of outlets.
Telegraph buys out Chelsea Magazine Company
Hey, look! It’s a good old-fashion media buy-out! And I do mean ‘old-fashioned’, as the Telegraph has bought a magazine company that publishes the most traditional luxury titles imaginable, including The English Garden. I wouldn’t be surprised to learn they publish a titles called ‘Royal Silverware Monthly’ or ‘Victorian Gentlemen’s Haunted Carriage Clocks’. Anyway, for the Telegraph this is all in service of building out its subscriber base.
UK to abolish law requiring press to pay legal costs when sued
The tone of this Guardian piece is fun, because author and media editor Jim Waterson makes zero effort to hide his disdain for the rule in question. In short, the government has said it will “roll back a rule that could require news outlets to pay the costs of the people who sue them unless the news outlet is signed up to a state-backed press regulator”.
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