The Paradox of Free

Post on 28-Jan-2015

115 Views

Category:

Technology

4 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Free is the prevailing business model of the online world, but this way of doing business is costing us too much.

Transcript

THE PARADOX OF FREE

Image by Nathan Congleton

By William Macfarlane

Free is the prevailing business model of the online world

Image by Thomas Hawk

Giving away services and software is the fastest way to build a large network of users

Image by Elventear

And popularity is the currency of the web

Image by Emanuele Rosso

The freeconomy motto:“Be the first to give away what others charge for”

Examples: Craiglist Wikipedia Skype

Image by Piermario

- Chris Anderson (Wired)

Ironically, the free business model is making a lot of money

Evernote, Twitter and Facebook are all free and worth over 1 Billion USD

Image by Johnny Vulkan

Consumers get things for free and developers make money for their good work

This looks like a win-win situation

Image by Eviloars

But, getting things for free comes with a heavy price

Image by dalioPhoto

Like privacy

The price we pay for a “free” Facebook is the sale of our personal information, used for user-specific advertising

Image by Ian B. Line

"The only way to get around the privacy problems inherent in advertising-supported social networks is to pay for services that we value"

Image by Frederic Poirot

- Alexis Madrigal (The Atlantic)

Because “when the product is free, you are the product”

- Ellis Hamburger (The Verge)

Image by *L

There are also significant expenses hidden in externalities- the costs that aren’t reflected in price

Image by US Marine Corp

For example, the energy expense of two google searches is approximately the same amount as boiling a kettle of water

Image by Benjamin Lehman

The total amount of google searches in 2011 was 1,722,071,000,000

Image by Benjamin Lehman

This environmental tax is the price we pay for google’s “free” service

a

Image by Agustan Ruiz

The freeconomy has also brought about serious challenges for the app world

Image by Pamhule

The price of our free app culture is software that often lacks accountability to those who use it

Image by Hani Amir

Free apps are frequently bought out by large companies, severing the apps relationship to its users

Examples:OinkStamped Punchfork

Image by Pascal Charest

"I really liked Punchfork, this sucks. It is a major pain to pull all of my information out. I don’t have the time time to move all 231 Likes.”

- TechCrunch commenter Kevin Rank

Image by dgies

There has been an out cry from developers that the only way for a healthy app culture to exist is if more people pay and more developers charge

Image by Dave Whitley

"Whether it’s in advertising, selling your data, or losing the service altogether, I think users are starting to see the cost of choosing free apps and services”

Image by Stephen Geyer

- Paul Mayne (Day One founder)

We all love free things, but maybe this freeconomy is not serving us as well as one where we paid a little more

Image by Mark Nye

“When the transaction is between you and the people who made the thing you want, there is a great relationship - a responsibility - that you don't get any other way"

Image by Ed Ivanushkin

- David Chartier(AgileBits)

The paradox here is that free is just too expensive

Image by Slayer925

Sourceshttp://www.theverge.com/2013/1/7/3835724/the-price-of-appshttp://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/16-03/ff_free?currentPage=allhttp://howto.wired.com/wiki/Make_Money_Around_Free_Contenthttp://appcubby.com/blog/the-sparrow-opportunity/http://www.economist.com/node/10094757http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/12/why-you-should-want-to-pay-for-software-instagram-edition/266367/http://smallbusiness.chron.com/advertising-revenue-facebook-13701.htmlhttp://www.forbes.com/sites/gregsatell/2013/02/21/how-much-is-facebook-really-worth/

Image by Bethan

All images are licensed under the Creative

Commons Non-Commercial Share-Alike

3.0 agreement and sourced from flickr

Image by Cameron Russell

top related