Free Internet Forever?
There was a lot of discussion about whether the Internet remains safe or not. It often seems to be a discussion between those who always have half full glass and those who are always half empty.
Nevertheless, I think that for over ten years we now have a wonderful free time. Our email, our site browsing and now social media were free. Ultimately. Typically, this great freebie is the compliments of display ads. However, as a salesman, I firmly feel that the advertising-only income model no longer cuts it.
Without going into information about the above, I will stick to my point that I can finally see our email transmission cost us. That's right-you might think twice in the future before you send that e-mail chain to 50 of your closest friends because it might prove worthless. We're going to see.
Ultimately, moving on to browsing and visiting sites, sites need to monetize their internet presence, so it should be free to visit sites. However, it might not be the amount of time you spend online. Ultimately, you can pay a token on the moment you spend online. Those logging in-almost sporadically all day long-may also believe twice if their time spent costs cash. After all, AOL used to offer our 20 hours of free internet-and I'm not sure that this model was supposed to die.
Then, let's remember the premium services like logging on through your smartphone, of course. Rapidly becoming a must-have, I see twenty-somethings browsing throughout the location as though they were at job. They are at work at times. This trend will not die-so why not by charging for this premium service monetize it?
I'm going to end with a no-brainer-including social networking. How can Facebook offer to host the entire lives of some people— their life database of friends and family — and maintain it all free in an organized location? This would also fall into the premium category-and eventually, like free browsing tweak, could become a paid service.
Now, I understand some might say angrily, "I'm not going to pay for the internet!" Maybe you're not going to, but I believe you could. After all, in the future, the web as it stands today will not be the web for which you feel worth paying. The internet will develop— like cheat on mobile free browsing, social networking, etc. — and if you refuse to pay, you will be out of the loop.
Facebook has already shown that around 75% of the country likes to be "in the loop" very much. So, in my humble opinion, all that needs to be done is a little more programming and feature-adding-as well as giving the price-adding a little bit of time to "breathe" and soon we're all going to pay about $20 a month for all the added features that the Internet brings us all day long.