Twitter is betting on a "cleaner" Internet
Business Models

Twitter is betting on a "cleaner" Internet

Twitter is promising wider distribution of “clean content” for readers to jump-start its subscription model. The company is pinning its hopes on Scroll, a tool that "cleans" up article pages, by ridding them of pop-up ads and other "clutter". Twitter expects to please readers frustrated by ads, while also satisfying publishers, who will be integrated into the revenue model. 

Scroll's model combines distribution of ad-free content for paying subscribers with revenue-sharing to entice publishers. 

The ad-blocking start-up, which launched in 2018, introduced this combination of good journalism plus revenue for hundreds of U.S.-based sites, including big media players, such as  the Atlantic, BuzzFeed, and Vox Media

Subscriptions to Scroll were previously $5 per month, but the company will no longer accept new sign-ups as Twitter works on integrating it into its platform.

https://twitter.com/arctictony/status/1389565785555836929

Twitter has not yet given extensive details about exactly how the change will look, but has been clear about why it made the acquisition.

"People come to Twitter every day to discover and read about what’s happening", Mike Park, Twitter’s vice president for product, said in a blog post announcing the deal. "If Twitter is where so much of this conversation lives, it should be easier and simpler to read the content that drives it."

https://twitter.com/mep/status/1389565647043055625

Twitter, which is quickly becoming a publishing platform in its own right, says its subscription service will offer a set of reader-friendly premium features. Without leaving the site, subscribers will be able to read news from publishers participating in the partnership and read newsletters from Revue, which Twitter acquired in January. Part of their subscription fees will go to publishers, many of whom are now focusing on boosting subscriptions, rather than relying on ads.

More from The Fix: Twitter Buys Revue Amid Newsletter Acquisition Frenzy

Photo by Alexander Shatov on Unsplash