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Online newspaper

An online newspaper (or electronic news or electronic news publication) is the online version of a newspaper, either as a stand-alone publication or as the online version of a printed periodical.

Screenshot of State Magazine (published by the US Department of State) which became an online-only publication in 2015

Going online created more opportunities for newspapers, such as competing with broadcast journalism in presenting breaking news in a more timely manner. The credibility and strong brand recognition of well established newspapers, and the close relationships they have with advertisers, are also seen by many in the newspaper industry as strengthening their chances of survival.[1] The movement away from the printing process can also help decrease costs.

Online newspapers, like printed newspapers, have legal restrictions regarding libel, privacy, and copyright,[2] also apply to online publications in most countries as in the UK. Also, the UK Data Protection Act applies to online newspapers and news pages.[3] Up to 2014, the PCC ruled in the UK, but there was no clear distinction between authentic online newspapers and forums or blogs. In 2007, a ruling was passed to formally regulate UK-based online newspapers, news audio, and news video websites covering the responsibilities expected of them and to clear up what is, and what is not an online news publication.[4]

News reporters are being taught to shoot video[5] and to write in the succinct manner necessary for Internet news pages. Some newspapers have attempted to integrate the Internet into every aspect of their operations, e.g., the writing of stories for both print and online, and classified advertisements appearing in both media, while other newspaper websites may be quite different from the corresponding printed newspaper.

History edit

An early example of an "online-only" newspaper or magazine was (PLATO) News Report, an online newspaper created by Bruce Parrello in 1974 on the PLATO system at the University of Illinois.[6] The first newspaper to go online was The Columbus Dispatch on July 1, 1980.[7] Beginning in 1987, the Brazilian newspaper Jornaldodia ran on the state-owned Embratel network, moving to the Internet in the 1990s. By the late 1990s, hundreds of U.S. newspapers were publishing online versions, but did not yet offer much interactivity.[8] One example is Britain's Weekend City Press Review, which provided a weekly news summary online beginning in 1995. Today, online news has become a huge part of society which leads people to argue whether or not it is good for society. Austra Taylor, author of the popular book, The Peoples Platform, argues that online news does not provide the detail needed to fully understand what actually happened. It is more just a fast summary to inform people what happened, but does not give a solution or fixation to the problem.[citation needed]

Examples edit

Very few newspapers in 2006 claimed to have made money from their websites, which were mostly free to all viewers. Declining profit margins and declining circulation in daily newspapers forced executives to contemplate new methods of obtaining revenue from websites, without charging for the subscription. This has been difficult. Newspapers with specialized audiences such as The Wall Street Journal and The Chronicle of Higher Education successfully charge subscription fees. Most newspapers have an online edition, including The Los Angeles Times,The Washington Post, USA Today, Mid-Day, and The New York Times. Many European countries also have their own English-language online news, such as The Daily Slovak News (Slovakia), Helsinki Times (Finland) and The Moscow Times (Russia).

The Guardian experimented with new media in 2005, offering a free twelve-part weekly podcast series by Ricky Gervais.[9] Another UK daily to go online is The Daily Telegraph.

In Australia, most major newspapers offer an online version, with or without a paywalled subscription option. In Algeria, the number of daily visitors of news websites and online editions of newspapers surpasses the number of daily readers of print newspapers since the end of 2016.[10]

Online-only newspapers edit

An online-only paper has no print-media connections. An example is the UK Southport Reporter, introduced in 2000—a weekly regional newspaper that is not produced or run in any format than 'soft-copy' on the Internet by its publishers, PCBT Photography. Another early example is "Bangla2000", also introduced in 2000, which was uploaded twice daily from Bangladesh and Edited by Tukun Mahmud Nurul Momen. Unlike the UK Southport Reporter, it was not a regional newspaper. Bangla2000.com ran international, economic, and sports news as well, simultaneously. The largest library of the world Library of Congress archived it subsequently. Unlike blog sites and other news websites, it is run as a newspaper and is recognized by media groups such as the NUJ and/or the IFJ. They fall under relevant press regulations and are signed up to the official UK press regulator IMPRESS. allNovaScotia is an online newspaper based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada that publishes business and political news six days a week. The website was the first online-only newspaper in Atlantic Canada and has been behind a paywall since starting in 2001.[11]

Even print media is turning to online-only publication. As of 2009, the decrease of the traditional business model of print newspapers has led to various attempts to establish local, regional or national online-only newspapers - publications that do original reporting, rather than just commentary or summaries of reporting from other publications. An early major example in the U.S. is the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, which stopped publishing after 149 years in March 2009 and went online only. In Scotland, in 2010, Caledonian Mercury became Scotland's first online-only newspaper, with the same aims as Southport Reporter in the UK, with The Yorkshire Times the following suit and becoming Yorkshire's first online-only paper in 2011. The Independent ceased print publications in 2016, becoming the first British national newspaper to move to an online only format.[12]

In the US, technology news websites such as CNET, TechCrunch, and ZDNet started as web publications and enjoy comparable readership to the conventional newspapers. Also, with the ever-rising popularity of online media, veteran publications like the U.S. News & World Report are abandoning print and going online-only. Another example of an online-only English daily newspaper is the Arabian Post,[13] focusing on the Middle East's current affairs and business.

In October 2020, 11 online only news portals formed DIGIPUB News India foundation to encourage an ecosystem of Digital Only press.[14]

Trends edit

In 2015, 65% of people reported that print was their preferred method for reading a newspaper, down 4% from 2014.[15] The methods people use to get their news from digital means was at 28%, as opposed to 20% of people attaining the news through print newspapers.[15] These trends indicate an increase in digital consumption of newspapers, as opposed to print.[16] Today, ad revenue for digital forms of newspapers is nearly 25%, while print is constituting the remaining 75%.[15] Contrastingly, ad revenue for digital methods was 5% in 2006.[15]

Hybrid newspapers edit

Hybrid newspapers are predominantly focused on online content, but also produce a print form.[17] Trends in online newspapers indicate publications may switch to digital methods, especially online newspapers in the future.[16] The New York Times is an example of this model of the newspaper as it provides both a home delivery print subscription and a digital one as well.[18] There are some newspapers which are predominantly online, but also provide limited hard copy publishing[11] An example is annarbor.com, which replaced the Ann Arbor News in the summer of 2009. It is primarily an online newspaper, but publishes a hard copy twice a week.[12] Other trends indicate that this business model is being adopted by many newspapers with the growth of digital media.[16]

The turn to hybrid publishing models has been commensurate with the increasing importance of social media platforms to disseminate news, especially amongst 18-24 demographic.[19]

Use edit

In 2013, the Reuters Institute[20] commissioned a cross-country survey on news consumption, and gathered data related to online newspaper use that emphasizes the lack of use of paid online newspaper services.[21] The countries surveyed were France, Germany, Denmark, Spain, Italy, Japan, Brazil, the United States, and the United Kingdom. All samples within each country were nationally representative. Half of the sample reportedly paid for a print newspaper in the past 7 days, and only one-twentieth of the sample paid for online news in the past 7 days. That only 5% of the sample had recently paid for online newspaper access is likely because most people access news that is free. People with portable devices, like tablets or smartphones, were significantly more likely to subscribe to digital news content. Additionally, people aged between 25 and 34 are more willing to pay for digital news than older people across all countries. This is in line with the Pew Research Center's[22] finding in a survey of U.S. Americans that the Internet is a leading source of news for people younger than 50.[23]

Popularity of online articles edit

Not all articles published online receive the same amount of attention; there are factors that determine their popularity. The number of times an article gets shared on social media is relevant for activists, politicians, authors, online-publishers and advertisers.[24] They thus have an interest in knowing the number of shares, preferably even predicting it before the article is being published. With new methods of Natural Language Processing such as Latent Dirichlet allocation it is possible to gain insights into the core characteristics of an article.

A team of Portuguese scientists [25] retrieved data from the website Mashable and made the dataset publicly available. Said "dataset about online news popularity". consists of 39,644 observations and 60 possible features, that have been collected over two years from 2013 to 2015. The features consist of variables describing words, links, digital media, time, keywords, insights from Natural Language Processing and the number of article shares. With the dataset being publicly available, a fair amount of data analysis has been conducted. Some can be found on the website "Kaggle". One "classification analysis". GitHub. 30 November 2020. used machine learning methods, namely, logistic regression, linear discriminant analysis, artificial neural networks and random forests to predict the top ten percent most frequently shared articles. The conclusion is, that the average keywords within an article and the average popularity of said keywords have the greatest impact on the amount of shares an article receives. Moreover, the amount of links to other articles and the closeness to the most relevant current topics are influencing the popularity of an article heavily. On the other hand, the day of publication is less important when it comes to predicting the popularity of the article.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Newspapers Recreate Their Medium 2007-03-14 at the Wayback Machine" eJournal USA, March 2006
  2. ^ "UK Copyright Law". copyrightservice.co.uk. 6 July 2020.
  3. ^ "Data Protection Act 1998". legislation.gov.uk.
  4. ^ See Journalism Mag. 2007-03-01 at the Wayback Machine and also the PCC website 2013-06-08 at the Wayback Machine AOP (UK Association of Online Publishers)
  5. ^ Andersen, Kurt (15 February 2007). "You Must Be Streaming". NYMag.com.
  6. ^ Silberman, Steve (17 March 1997). "'PLATO People' reunite, honor founder". wired.com.
  7. ^ "New Media Timeline (1980)". December 16, 2004.
  8. ^ Schultz, Tanjev (1999). "Interactive Options in Online Journalism: A Content Analysis of 100 U.S. Newspapers". Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication. 5 (1): 1. doi:10.1111/j.1083-6101.1999.tb00331.x.
  9. ^ Jason Deans, 2005-12-08. "Gervais to host Radio 2 Christmas show 2022-11-29 at the Wayback Machine." The Guardian.
  10. ^ "Projet pour un pacte d'avenir/ Les médias électroniques plus fort potential pour développer des contenus algériens Sur Internet". Algérie Focus (in French). November 12, 2017. Retrieved November 12, 2017.
  11. ^ Alzner, Belina. "A paywall success story: AllNovaScotia.com". J-Source: The Canadian Journalism Project. J-Source. Retrieved 13 April 2016.
  12. ^ "Independent to cease as print edition". BBC News. 2016-02-12. Retrieved 2023-11-17.
  13. ^ "News, Politics, Business, Tech and the Arts on Arabian Post - Arabian Post". Arabian Post.
  14. ^ "Eleven Indian Digital Media Publications Come Together to 'Build a Digital News Ecology'". The Wire. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
  15. ^ a b c d Barthel, Michael (2016-06-15). "Newspapers: Fact Sheet". Pew Research Center's Journalism Project. Retrieved 2016-10-10.
  16. ^ a b c "The Race". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved 2016-10-10.
  17. ^ "Page Redirection". annarbor.com. Retrieved 2016-10-10.
  18. ^ "Breaking News, World News & Multimedia". Retrieved 2016-10-10.
  19. ^ "Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2021" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2021-06-26.
  20. ^ "Reuters Institute for the study of Journalism". Reuters Institute for the study of Journalism.
  21. ^ Newman, N., & Levy, D.A.L. (2013). Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2013. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford.
  22. ^ "Pew Research Center - Nonpartisan, non-advocacy public opinion polling, and demographic research". www.pewresearch.org.
  23. ^ Dimock, M., Doherty, C., Nagina.net & Tyson, A. (2013). Report: Amid Criticism, Support for Media's 'Watchdog' Role Stands Out. Pew Research Center.
  24. ^ Bandari, R., Azur, S., & Huberman, B. (2012). "The Pulse of News in Social Media: Forecasting Popularity" (PDF).
  25. ^ Fernandes, K. , Vinagre, P. & Cortez, P. (2015)."A Proactive Intelligent Decision Support System for Predicting the Popularity of Online News" (PDF).

Further reading edit

  • Herre van Oostendorp & Christof van Nimwegen (September 1998). (PDF). Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication. 4 (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-23. Retrieved 2011-12-20.
  • Hsiang Iris Chyi & George Sylvie (1998). "Competing With Whom? Where? And How? A Structural Analysis of the Electronic Newspaper Market". Journal of Media Economics. 11 (2): 1–18. doi:10.1207/s15327736me1102_1.
  • Carina Ihlström; Maria Åkesson; Stig Nordqvist (2004-07-07). "From print to web to e-paper — the challenge of designing the e-newspaper" (PDF).
  • Hanluain, D. O. (2004-02-13). "Free content becoming thing of the past for UK's online newspaper sites". Online Journalism Review.
  • Hsiang Iris Chyi & Dominic L. Lasorsa (2002). "An Explorative Study on the Market Relation Between Online and Print Newspapers". Journal of Media Economics. 15 (2): 91–106. doi:10.1207/S15327736ME1502_2. S2CID 154854346.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Online newspapers at Wikimedia Commons
  • Online archive of newspapers at Google News Archive
  • US newspaper and obituaries directory at LDS Genealogy

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An online newspaper or electronic news or electronic news publication is the online version of a newspaper either as a stand alone publication or as the online version of a printed periodical Screenshot of State Magazine published by the US Department of State which became an online only publication in 2015Going online created more opportunities for newspapers such as competing with broadcast journalism in presenting breaking news in a more timely manner The credibility and strong brand recognition of well established newspapers and the close relationships they have with advertisers are also seen by many in the newspaper industry as strengthening their chances of survival 1 The movement away from the printing process can also help decrease costs Online newspapers like printed newspapers have legal restrictions regarding libel privacy and copyright 2 also apply to online publications in most countries as in the UK Also the UK Data Protection Act applies to online newspapers and news pages 3 Up to 2014 the PCC ruled in the UK but there was no clear distinction between authentic online newspapers and forums or blogs In 2007 a ruling was passed to formally regulate UK based online newspapers news audio and news video websites covering the responsibilities expected of them and to clear up what is and what is not an online news publication 4 News reporters are being taught to shoot video 5 and to write in the succinct manner necessary for Internet news pages Some newspapers have attempted to integrate the Internet into every aspect of their operations e g the writing of stories for both print and online and classified advertisements appearing in both media while other newspaper websites may be quite different from the corresponding printed newspaper Contents 1 History 2 Examples 3 Online only newspapers 4 Trends 5 Hybrid newspapers 6 Use 7 Popularity of online articles 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editAn early example of an online only newspaper or magazine was PLATO News Report an online newspaper created by Bruce Parrello in 1974 on the PLATO system at the University of Illinois 6 The first newspaper to go online was The Columbus Dispatch on July 1 1980 7 Beginning in 1987 the Brazilian newspaper Jornaldodia ran on the state owned Embratel network moving to the Internet in the 1990s By the late 1990s hundreds of U S newspapers were publishing online versions but did not yet offer much interactivity 8 One example is Britain s Weekend City Press Review which provided a weekly news summary online beginning in 1995 Today online news has become a huge part of society which leads people to argue whether or not it is good for society Austra Taylor author of the popular book The Peoples Platform argues that online news does not provide the detail needed to fully understand what actually happened It is more just a fast summary to inform people what happened but does not give a solution or fixation to the problem citation needed Examples editVery few newspapers in 2006 claimed to have made money from their websites which were mostly free to all viewers Declining profit margins and declining circulation in daily newspapers forced executives to contemplate new methods of obtaining revenue from websites without charging for the subscription This has been difficult Newspapers with specialized audiences such as The Wall Street Journal and The Chronicle of Higher Education successfully charge subscription fees Most newspapers have an online edition including The Los Angeles Times The Washington Post USA Today Mid Day and The New York Times Many European countries also have their own English language online news such as The Daily Slovak News Slovakia Helsinki Times Finland and The Moscow Times Russia The Guardian experimented with new media in 2005 offering a free twelve part weekly podcast series by Ricky Gervais 9 Another UK daily to go online is The Daily Telegraph In Australia most major newspapers offer an online version with or without a paywalled subscription option In Algeria the number of daily visitors of news websites and online editions of newspapers surpasses the number of daily readers of print newspapers since the end of 2016 10 Online only newspapers editAn online only paper has no print media connections An example is the UK Southport Reporter introduced in 2000 a weekly regional newspaper that is not produced or run in any format than soft copy on the Internet by its publishers PCBT Photography Another early example is Bangla2000 also introduced in 2000 which was uploaded twice daily from Bangladesh and Edited by Tukun Mahmud Nurul Momen Unlike the UK Southport Reporter it was not a regional newspaper Bangla2000 com ran international economic and sports news as well simultaneously The largest library of the world Library of Congress archived it subsequently Unlike blog sites and other news websites it is run as a newspaper and is recognized by media groups such as the NUJ and or the IFJ They fall under relevant press regulations and are signed up to the official UK press regulator IMPRESS allNovaScotia is an online newspaper based in Halifax Nova Scotia Canada that publishes business and political news six days a week The website was the first online only newspaper in Atlantic Canada and has been behind a paywall since starting in 2001 11 Even print media is turning to online only publication As of 2009 the decrease of the traditional business model of print newspapers has led to various attempts to establish local regional or national online only newspapers publications that do original reporting rather than just commentary or summaries of reporting from other publications An early major example in the U S is the Seattle Post Intelligencer which stopped publishing after 149 years in March 2009 and went online only In Scotland in 2010 Caledonian Mercury became Scotland s first online only newspaper with the same aims as Southport Reporter in the UK with The Yorkshire Times the following suit and becoming Yorkshire s first online only paper in 2011 The Independent ceased print publications in 2016 becoming the first British national newspaper to move to an online only format 12 In the US technology news websites such as CNET TechCrunch and ZDNet started as web publications and enjoy comparable readership to the conventional newspapers Also with the ever rising popularity of online media veteran publications like the U S News amp World Report are abandoning print and going online only Another example of an online only English daily newspaper is the Arabian Post 13 focusing on the Middle East s current affairs and business In October 2020 11 online only news portals formed DIGIPUB News India foundation to encourage an ecosystem of Digital Only press 14 Trends editIn 2015 65 of people reported that print was their preferred method for reading a newspaper down 4 from 2014 15 The methods people use to get their news from digital means was at 28 as opposed to 20 of people attaining the news through print newspapers 15 These trends indicate an increase in digital consumption of newspapers as opposed to print 16 Today ad revenue for digital forms of newspapers is nearly 25 while print is constituting the remaining 75 15 Contrastingly ad revenue for digital methods was 5 in 2006 15 Hybrid newspapers editHybrid newspapers are predominantly focused on online content but also produce a print form 17 Trends in online newspapers indicate publications may switch to digital methods especially online newspapers in the future 16 The New York Times is an example of this model of the newspaper as it provides both a home delivery print subscription and a digital one as well 18 There are some newspapers which are predominantly online but also provide limited hard copy publishing 11 An example is annarbor com which replaced the Ann Arbor News in the summer of 2009 It is primarily an online newspaper but publishes a hard copy twice a week 12 Other trends indicate that this business model is being adopted by many newspapers with the growth of digital media 16 The turn to hybrid publishing models has been commensurate with the increasing importance of social media platforms to disseminate news especially amongst 18 24 demographic 19 Use editIn 2013 the Reuters Institute 20 commissioned a cross country survey on news consumption and gathered data related to online newspaper use that emphasizes the lack of use of paid online newspaper services 21 The countries surveyed were France Germany Denmark Spain Italy Japan Brazil the United States and the United Kingdom All samples within each country were nationally representative Half of the sample reportedly paid for a print newspaper in the past 7 days and only one twentieth of the sample paid for online news in the past 7 days That only 5 of the sample had recently paid for online newspaper access is likely because most people access news that is free People with portable devices like tablets or smartphones were significantly more likely to subscribe to digital news content Additionally people aged between 25 and 34 are more willing to pay for digital news than older people across all countries This is in line with the Pew Research Center s 22 finding in a survey of U S Americans that the Internet is a leading source of news for people younger than 50 23 Popularity of online articles editNot all articles published online receive the same amount of attention there are factors that determine their popularity The number of times an article gets shared on social media is relevant for activists politicians authors online publishers and advertisers 24 They thus have an interest in knowing the number of shares preferably even predicting it before the article is being published With new methods of Natural Language Processing such as Latent Dirichlet allocation it is possible to gain insights into the core characteristics of an article A team of Portuguese scientists 25 retrieved data from the website Mashable and made the dataset publicly available Said dataset about online news popularity consists of 39 644 observations and 60 possible features that have been collected over two years from 2013 to 2015 The features consist of variables describing words links digital media time keywords insights from Natural Language Processing and the number of article shares With the dataset being publicly available a fair amount of data analysis has been conducted Some can be found on the website Kaggle One classification analysis GitHub 30 November 2020 used machine learning methods namely logistic regression linear discriminant analysis artificial neural networks and random forests to predict the top ten percent most frequently shared articles The conclusion is that the average keywords within an article and the average popularity of said keywords have the greatest impact on the amount of shares an article receives Moreover the amount of links to other articles and the closeness to the most relevant current topics are influencing the popularity of an article heavily On the other hand the day of publication is less important when it comes to predicting the popularity of the article See also editComputer magazine Digital media Electronic journalism History of French journalism Internet Internet radio Internet television Online magazine World Wide Web List of online newspaper archivesReferences edit Newspapers Recreate Their Medium Archived 2007 03 14 at the Wayback Machine eJournal USA March 2006 UK Copyright Law copyrightservice co uk 6 July 2020 Data Protection Act 1998 legislation gov uk See Journalism Mag Archived 2007 03 01 at the Wayback Machine and also the PCC website Archived 2013 06 08 at the Wayback Machine AOP UK Association of Online Publishers Andersen Kurt 15 February 2007 You Must Be Streaming NYMag com Silberman Steve 17 March 1997 PLATO People reunite honor founder wired com New Media Timeline 1980 December 16 2004 Schultz Tanjev 1999 Interactive Options in Online Journalism A Content Analysis of 100 U S Newspapers Journal of Computer Mediated Communication 5 1 1 doi 10 1111 j 1083 6101 1999 tb00331 x Jason Deans 2005 12 08 Gervais to host Radio 2 Christmas show Archived 2022 11 29 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian Projet pour un pacte d avenir Les medias electroniques plus fort potential pour developper des contenus algeriens Sur Internet Algerie Focus in French November 12 2017 Retrieved November 12 2017 Alzner Belina A paywall success story AllNovaScotia com J Source The Canadian Journalism Project J Source Retrieved 13 April 2016 Independent to cease as print edition BBC News 2016 02 12 Retrieved 2023 11 17 News Politics Business Tech and the Arts on Arabian Post Arabian Post Arabian Post Eleven Indian Digital Media Publications Come Together to Build a Digital News Ecology The Wire Retrieved 2020 10 29 a b c d Barthel Michael 2016 06 15 Newspapers Fact Sheet Pew Research Center s Journalism Project Retrieved 2016 10 10 a b c The Race Columbia Journalism Review Retrieved 2016 10 10 Page Redirection annarbor com Retrieved 2016 10 10 Breaking News World News amp Multimedia Retrieved 2016 10 10 Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2021 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2021 06 26 Reuters Institute for the study of Journalism Reuters Institute for the study of Journalism Newman N amp Levy D A L 2013 Reuters Institute Digital News Report 2013 Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism University of Oxford Pew Research Center Nonpartisan non advocacy public opinion polling and demographic research www pewresearch org Dimock M Doherty C Nagina net amp Tyson A 2013 Report Amid Criticism Support for Media s Watchdog Role Stands Out Pew Research Center Bandari R Azur S amp Huberman B 2012 The Pulse of News in Social Media Forecasting Popularity PDF Fernandes K Vinagre P amp Cortez P 2015 A Proactive Intelligent Decision Support System for Predicting the Popularity of Online News PDF Further reading editHerre van Oostendorp amp Christof van Nimwegen September 1998 Locating Information in an Online Newspaper PDF Journal of Computer Mediated Communication 4 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 04 23 Retrieved 2011 12 20 Hsiang Iris Chyi amp George Sylvie 1998 Competing With Whom Where And How A Structural Analysis of the Electronic Newspaper Market Journal of Media Economics 11 2 1 18 doi 10 1207 s15327736me1102 1 Carina Ihlstrom Maria Akesson Stig Nordqvist 2004 07 07 From print to web to e paper the challenge of designing the e newspaper PDF Hanluain D O 2004 02 13 Free content becoming thing of the past for UK s online newspaper sites Online Journalism Review Hsiang Iris Chyi amp Dominic L Lasorsa 2002 An Explorative Study on the Market Relation Between Online and Print Newspapers Journal of Media Economics 15 2 91 106 doi 10 1207 S15327736ME1502 2 S2CID 154854346 External links edit nbsp Media related to Online newspapers at Wikimedia Commons Online archive of newspapers at Google News Archive US newspaper and obituaries directory at LDS Genealogy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Online newspaper amp oldid 1207103296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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