Imitation is her eroticismthe sincerest form of petty theft.
Facebook invited some page owners to try out its Fan Subscription service Monday night, a new feature that directly competes with Patreon. But the terms of the agreement and Facebook's history with page owners have caused many to scoff at and shirk the offer.
SEE ALSO: Patreon's idealism might actually be paying offNamely, page owners report that the terms of the service enable Facebook to take up to a 30 percent cut of subscriptions. That's in comparison to Patreon's 10 percent, 5 percent of which go to fees and processing, and the other 5 percent that Patreon keeps.
The other clause putting off pages from joining is the assertion that Facebook (and its affiliates!) will get lifetime rights to use creator content however it wishes, even after a page stops using the service.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Facebook is offering the subscription service for no fee at first. But its terms say that it retains the rights to change that at any time.
Page owners that received the invitation are also aghast because of their previous relationship with Facebook. Changes that Facebook made to its algorithm in recent years have severely limited the reach and ability to earn ad revenue from content posted on Facebook.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Facebook's move on Fan Subscriptions is typical and telling in a couple ways. It shows how Facebook continues to add more tentacles to its business, further horizontally integrating to be a digital everything service — primarily by copying the successful business models and services of other companies. Facebook has recently launched ventures in dating (à la Match), direct selling (à la Craigslist), home services and reviews (à la Yelp), and much, much more.
Facebook's tendency to mimic also extends into its bread and butter business of social media. It directly stole the whole concept of stories and ephemerality from Snapchat, and Facebook recently launched its own version of short-form video platform TikTok, called Lasso.
Patreon, on the other hand, wants nothing to do with Facebook's business. It is supportive of its creators using any platform however they wish, and many creators do use Facebook to communicate with and manage their communities. But when I spoke with Patreon co-founder Jack Conte and SVP of Product Wyatt Jenkins at their creator conference, Patrecon, in December, both expressed that they were trying to build a business and a payment model that was as fundamentally different from the way current internet giants manage content, users, and data.
"We don't want to be where people digest content," Jenkins said at the time. "We're not obsessed about engagement, or what part of the video people are watching. That's just not our game."
Facebook, by contrast, wants to serve fans who subscribe "exclusive content" — the rights to which it will retain long after creators leave the platform.
"I'm tired of this system of converting attention into dollars, and using advertising to fund and finance the web," Conte said. "You can be paid what you're worth, instead of what tech platforms want to pay you."
Ironically, Conte's rebellion against the web as it is has apparently been an attractive prospect to Facebook. Facebook initially launched a very limited fan subscription service in 2018. But it only went wide this week — about a month after Patreon announced that it had grown its platform to 3 million users, who will surpass $1 billion in contributions paid to creators in 2019.
Will the appeal of Facebook's massive reach be enough to sway page owners to Fan Subscriptions? Given the backlash to the terms of the initiative, that's not looking likely. Besides, Patreon seems to know what its users want: transparency, a clear value proposition, and for the company to get out of creators' damn way.
"We'll just stay that central hub for creators to own that relationship with their fans, and have no algorithms between them and their fans, because that's what they're pissed about," Jenkins said in December. "They're tired of someone unilaterally deciding how many views they get, and changing algorithms, and doing all that work. They're tired of it. That's why they come to Patreon."
Topics Facebook Social Media
The Exceptional Dovey Johnson Roundtree by Tayari JonesOur Contributors’ Favorite Books of 2019 by The Paris ReviewA Figure Model’s (Brief) Guide to Poses through Art History by Larissa PhamI switched to MacBook, but here are 5 things I miss about WindowsThe Silence of Witches by Sabrina Orah MarkWhat’s the Point? by Michael Chabon9 things to say when someone asks why you're still singleA Bridegroom Called Death by Julia BerickReading in the Age of Constant Distraction by Mairead Small StaidBest Peloton alternative deal: save 55% on the NordicTrack S22i Studio CycleI switched to MacBook, but here are 5 things I miss about WindowsRite Aid is now banned from using AI facial recognition tech9 things to say when someone asks why you're still singleObjects of Despair: Fake Meat by Meghan O’GieblynOn Classic Party Fiction by Elisa Gabbert'The Creator' review: A stunning reminder we need more original sciNot Gonna Get Us by Amanda Lee KoeiOS 17.2.1 update: What's coming to your iPhone?How to watch UCF vs. Georgia Tech football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and moreIceland's volcanic eruption is happening — and you can watch it live Redux: Marks of Feathers by The Paris Review The Flatterer and the Chatterer by Marjorie Garber More Than Just a Lesbian Love Story by Lucy Scholes Masks at Twilight by The Paris Review The Art of Distance No. 12 by The Paris Review The Sky Is Blue with a Single Cloud by Kuniko Tsurita Redux: This Satisfied Procession by The Paris Review Philip Roth’s Last Laugh by Benjamin Taylor The Crisis Cliché by Hermione Hoby The Wicked Candor of Wanda Coleman by Terrance Hayes The Ancestry Project by Mariah Stovall The Archive by Melissa Chadburn The Edge of the Map by Colin Dickey On Lasts by Jill Talbot Cantilever by Jordan Kisner The Art of Distance No. 19 by The Paris Review The Art of Distance No. 11 by The Paris Review Americana by Erica Dawson Let It Burn by Robert Jones, Jr. Stalin’s Bodyguard: An Interview with Alex Halberstadt by John Jeremiah Sullivan
2.5101s , 8285.609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【her eroticism】,Co-creation Information Network