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March 05, 2008

Could Micropayments Save the Web?

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Imagine a Web without clutter. A Web without flashing banner ads. Imagine with me, friends... Don't misunderstand me; I'm not naïve. I know that someone has to pay for all those helpful Web pages. I just think that perhaps a better payment model--one talked about quite a bit 10 or so years ago but never adopted--might be better overall. Instead of relying on Web ads to drive revenue for content-bearing pages, let's look seriously at micropayments.

The idea with micropayments is simple: Right now, most of the content on the Web is free to read, so long as the banner ads don't drive you crazy. In a micropayments scheme, one or more companies would offer Web-based technologies that would let any Web site put a button somewhat like the all-too-convenient “One-Click” button on Amazon pages on any or all of its Web pages. Surfing to a Web page containing some interesting content would reveal some, but not all, of the information on the page. If you wanted to read the rest of the page, you'd click the “make a micropayment” button, which would transfer money from you to the owner of the Web page.

"What's the big deal," you might ask. I think it's safe to assume that anyone reading this online column buys stuff on the Web all the time, so how would a “micropayment” be easier? A successful micropayment scheme would, I think, incorporate two aspects: ease of use and a small-payment-friendly format.

The ease-of-use part is easy: Implement something along the lines of One-Click--assuming that there's a way to do that without invoking the wrath of Amazon. As I'm not a lawyer, I'll just say that for a micropayment system to be successful, it should have no setup overhead on a page-by-page basis. For example, suppose I put together a 10-page monograph on the A-to-Z of repairing user profiles, and put it on my Web site with a micropayment button on the page. You find the page through a Google search, read the first two pages for free, and decide that you'd like to read the entire article--for which I'll charge you $0.50. Here's where it gets tricky, though--what must you do at this point to complete the transaction? If you had to jump off to some other page and create an “account” on my Web site to pay $0.50, I'm pretty sure that 80 percent of would-be buyers would just say, “The heck with it.” To be useful, the micropayments system would have to be something you'd set up just once. I'd also set up the micropayments system as a vendor, as would many other Web sites. Thus, if you had, for example, purchased an article from the Windows IT Pro Web site in the past, and if the Windows IT Pro Web site used the same micropayments system as I did, then you'd be ready to go--just one click and, probably, a login, and I'd have the half a buck and you'd have the information.

A micropayments system must also be “micropayment friendly.” In the real world, it would be silly of me to use something like Paypal to collect my 50 cents because of the way that Paypal charges e-merchants 30 cents up front per transaction and some percentage thereafter. In other words, you wouldn't be paying me for the profile-repair information, you'd be paying Paypal. I think that's important because I don't think micropayments can work unless they're small. I mean, you can buy a 1,800-page book that I wrote on Windows Server 2003 for about $45. At about 250 words per page, you're paying about a hundredth of a penny per word for the book, so what would you expect to pay for 10 pages? I'm not sure if it'd be 2 cents or 50 cents, but I'm pretty sure that most people wouldn't pay 10 bucks.

Okay, entrepreneurs out there, whaddya say? Micropayments: The time has come.

End of Article



Reader Comments
Nice concept, though everyone knows that even if the micropayments scheme comes to fruition, people will still have banner ads on those same pages along with micropayments. There will likely never be a law to say otherwise, so people will do it. Then we’ll have a web that we not only have to pay micropayments for (along with whatever ISP charges we pay) but also one littered with same obnoxious banner ads that we were trying to avoid.

After that, the public will likely begin to get fed-up with having to make a micropayment in order to read information still peppered with those same annoying ads and vendors will likely respond with “Micropayemnt-free” sites in an attempt to attract the patrons who have been jaded by the “drug-dealer” business model i.e. First little bit is free, then you have to pay, pay, pay—and by the way, now you have to remember a login for this site, too. Make sure you write it down—then don’t forget to back it up!

jwagnerzmw March 05, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Would this be the demise of the internet! We all bair the cost is some way today, but I don't see how this would solve anything. There is a lot of great content out there and most of it is on free sites. People do become creatures of habit, and when looking for solutions, they would go back to the same sources that they trust, which might in turn leave out a huge chuck of what is online.

Plus many websites would try to double cash in on this, just as windowsitpro, no offense. I purchse 2 magazine subscriptions and also get access to this website with that subscription, but I'm also looking at various advertisements. Eventually costs go up, and to reduce cost, companies would look towards ways of reducing the cost thru advertising.

How would new products get marketed? Would this be through more spam?

compa March 05, 2008 (Article Rating: )


How about micropayments for email? You would have to route your email through a fee-paying postoffice where you have an account. Internet smtp routers would simply have to refuse any email without a valid token. Or post-offices (including Exchange) would just have to refuse all email without a valid token.

I would gladly pay a penny or less for each email I send. Spammers, however, would think twice about sending a million spams per minute.

Microsoft or someone one on the IP Protocols Commission should be able to come up with something like that. How about an article on this possibility?

janderson18 March 05, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Not a good idea. There is no doubt banners would still stay, micropayments or not. Besides, I don't care about the banners, I just ignore them. I wonder if anyone out there reads them, let alone clicks on them. As long as the advertisers don't realize how totally inefficient this stuff is, let them pour the money in. Who cares?

ivokvesic March 06, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Save the web? Does the web need saving?
If sites are so slow and bogged down, people will vote with mouse clicks and go somewhere else. Micropayments would change the fundamental essence of the web that made it a hit in the first place.
Want to save the web by improving speed, removing clutter, and eliminating bandwith waste? Fix the problem of spam, and curtail **** traffic.

dfosbenner March 06, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Banner ads or not, a workable micropayment system is over due. Curious that people get hung up on the title of the article. As much as there is a lot of free content available now, a system that directly compensates authors of content will explode the quality and depth of that information. To me, it seems the bottleneck to micropayment has always been the exorbitant merchant fees charged by Paypal and the credit card companies,as you pointed out. Amazon and others are making an attempt at micropayment, but they all seem to take that first 30 cents. When the credit card companies figure out a way to make even more money by charging a smaller fee and increasing the number of transactions, then we will have a micopayment system.

steve tuscher March 06, 2008 (Article Rating: )


I don't think it would fly. Imagine having a meter on a TV set where you have to put in a small amount of money for the shows vs free with ads. Wouldn't fly. Also hard to price - I don't know if something is worth .50 until I see it. Can I get a refund when the article was obvious?

bdfranson@yahoo.com March 06, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Yeah, the Internet would be just like PBS where there are no commercials! Oh, wait. PBS has those annoying 3 hour infomercials, and beg-a-thons, and "spnsors" and viewers like you and...

We have a free model that works, don't mess with it.

nelson.wilkinson@hp.com March 07, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Here, here janderson18. Even if pay-per-email only meant the end of those wonderful "forward this to your 10 best friends to let them know how much you love them or suffer eternal damnation" emails, it would be a start.

duncan_priest March 10, 2008 (Article Rating: )


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