The Paradox of Free
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Transcript of The Paradox of Free
![Page 1: The Paradox of Free](https://reader033.fdocuments.us/reader033/viewer/2022061300/54c841784a7959707f8b4579/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
THE PARADOX OF FREE
Image by Nathan Congleton
By William Macfarlane
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Free is the prevailing business model of the online world
Image by Thomas Hawk
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Giving away services and software is the fastest way to build a large network of users
Image by Elventear
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And popularity is the currency of the web
Image by Emanuele Rosso
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The freeconomy motto:“Be the first to give away what others charge for”
Examples: Craiglist Wikipedia Skype
Image by Piermario
- Chris Anderson (Wired)
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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
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Consumers get things for free and developers make money for their good work
This looks like a win-win situation
Image by Eviloars
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But, getting things for free comes with a heavy price
Image by dalioPhoto
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Like privacy
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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
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"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)
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Because “when the product is free, you are the product”
- Ellis Hamburger (The Verge)
Image by *L
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There are also significant expenses hidden in externalities- the costs that aren’t reflected in price
Image by US Marine Corp
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For example, the energy expense of two google searches is approximately the same amount as boiling a kettle of water
Image by Benjamin Lehman
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The total amount of google searches in 2011 was 1,722,071,000,000
Image by Benjamin Lehman
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This environmental tax is the price we pay for google’s “free” service
a
Image by Agustan Ruiz
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The freeconomy has also brought about serious challenges for the app world
Image by Pamhule
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The price of our free app culture is software that often lacks accountability to those who use it
Image by Hani Amir
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Free apps are frequently bought out by large companies, severing the apps relationship to its users
Examples:OinkStamped Punchfork
Image by Pascal Charest
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"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
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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
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"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)
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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
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“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)
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The paradox here is that free is just too expensive
Image by Slayer925
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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
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All images are licensed under the Creative
Commons Non-Commercial Share-Alike
3.0 agreement and sourced from flickr
Image by Cameron Russell