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-   -   Paul Markham - There is nothing wrong with the tube model. (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1055754)

porno jew 02-01-2012 01:05 PM

who cares if your promo video gets a billion people to watch your promo vid, it's their bandwidth. just as long as people go to your tour and join page it's all good.

porno jew 02-01-2012 01:06 PM

does everyone who watches a pepsi commercial run out to the store immediately and buy one you idiot?

Colmike9 02-01-2012 01:09 PM

Also, saying that conversion ratios are much worse than they used to be is mostly because there are tons of more affiliates these days to compete with, lots more website out there because of lower hosting costs/freehosts/easier to make now, faster internet connections, better longer videos for people to get off to, people got wise to file sharing, oversaturation of porn on the internet makes paying for porn seem pointless, etc..

I'm curious how the big paysites are doing in terms of conversion ratios since there aren't thousands of affiliates bringing in different numbers..

I wish I was in this business in the 90s, but I was still a kid.. :(

Colmike9 02-01-2012 01:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18727691)
does everyone who watches a pepsi commercial run out to the store immediately and buy one you idiot?

Every single time :upsidedow

Jakez 02-01-2012 01:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18725282)
200,000 x $3 = $600,000 Turn Over a day x 1 year = $219,000,000 a year off one Tube site.

If every visitor were spending $3 there wouldn't be 200,000 visitors. I know that's hard for you to understand though. Don't hurt yourself trying to figure it out.

Trust us, we ALL understand what you're saying, every time you say it, whether it makes any sense or not. But you can't understand a damn thing anyone tries to explain to you or maybe you just refuse to.

You sure seem to find the most basic shit interesting though.

PR_Glen (after you compared theatre sales and porn sales lmfao): that's a completely different product. People don't go to the theatre to alleviate sexual impulses, not compared to what we are selling, so comparing the two is nonsense.
Paul Markham reply: Interesting post. So what are you selling here. Traffic or a 30 day paysite join?

Interesting post? No, it's not interesting, it's common fucking sense. But the extent of your ability to understand things is beginning to show. You thought it was interesting because it was such a basic point even you could understand it. And you just disagree with anything else more confusing. Then you follow it up with an equally retarded question that ANYONE could answer.

stocktrader23 02-01-2012 01:39 PM

He didn't respond with a single point at a time so once again no progress was made in the evolution of Paul.

On that note, did he stop trolling around all the other threads last night or was he pulling a double? :glugglug

porno jew 02-01-2012 01:41 PM

keep him busy in this thread thanks.

pimpmaster9000 02-01-2012 01:47 PM

What is wrong with the pirate tube model is that times are changing in favor of pay sites. ACTA/SOPA/PIPA whatever will soon be passed in one form or another. "Safe haven" means nothing if they block your payment processor or traffic to the USA and Euro. It's a dying business model. It's like investing in VHS video tapes.

The time of quality pirate tubes will soon be over. Too much waves are coming and the pirate boat is taking in water already. It will be to easy to take them out. Why invest money, as an affiliate or even as an owner, in a failing model when you can invest in quality content?

stocktrader23 02-01-2012 01:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by crucifissio (Post 18727871)
What is wrong with the pirate tube model is that times are changing in favor of pay sites. ACTA/SOPA/PIPA whatever will soon be passed in one form or another. "Safe haven" means nothing if they block your payment processor or traffic to the USA and Euro. It's a dying business model. It's like investing in VHS video tapes.

The time of quality pirate tubes will soon be over. Too much waves are coming and the pirate boat is taking in water already. It will be to easy to take them out. Why invest money, as an affiliate or even as an owner, in a failing model when you can invest in quality content?

Who brought up these pirate tubes anyhow? Irrelevant to the topic.

Jakez 02-01-2012 02:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18727826)
keep him busy in this thread thanks.

I think we need a daily thread with Paul Markham in the title to keep him out of the other ones.

alf6300 02-01-2012 03:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ilnjscb (Post 18725837)
I know from watching your posts that you've grown your program significantly over the last two years. Somehow (probably with hard work and brains) you're getting it right.

Here is the question, and I think this is the crux of it:

Is the "new reality" of 1:3000 - 6000 a shelf or a point on a declining line? If it is a new stable place, then everyone will adapt to that. If the ratios continue to decline drastically, then we are teaching new users never to pay and the 1:3000 is old guys who will be gone from the consumer population soon.

Watching the success you had, you probably can answer that. Are signups declining for equal effort, or have they reached a stable low point?

Hey ilnjscb
Honestly, I don't take the "ratios" too seriously if they are not contextualized.
1:3000 can be a catastrophe or a goldmine, or anything in the middle, depending on the model of your business. If you bought each click 10c each, you'd go bust by the next day, with this ratio.
On the other hand, if the "3000" in the equation is merely views on a tube that pays for its bandwidth, it makes a very scalable business case to me. Personally, I don't find helpful to compare this "3000" to a "300" of some different model/traffic/technological era/etc . In this sense, it's not a "low" but just a different way to make money.

The larger point for me is the following.
People are consuming more porn today than in any other era in human history - as they are consuming more music today than in any other era. Neither thing is a bad one for me.

Both music and porn come largely for free, and this is mostly due to the technology. Digital is cheap, convenient, and easily reproduced.
One may like such technology or dislike it: but the traditional music industry has crashed frontally while disliking it. In the meanwhile, though, the very same music revolution helped Apple become the most valuable company in the world.

In any breakthrough, there are Schumpeter's losers and winners.

Quote:

Originally Posted by ilnjscb (Post 18725837)
Watching the success you had, you probably can answer that. Are signups declining for equal effort, or have they reached a stable low point?

In all honesty, I don't see for myself a worsening signup/effort.

I believe one root cause is that we asked ourselves what type of added value we could provide, in a tube-era, with a paysite.

We are not trying to build paysites that are "mini-tubes with a theme", as some traditional paysites out there. Instead, we try to provide a homely experience that typically tubes are not well placed to do. Gone are tours, member areas, etc. We basically create personal concepts with a voice and a fairly credible storyline, leave comments open, engage in conversations and interactions with guests and members, with a 'persona' in the mix. Memberships just pay for the convenience of videos dowloadable in place, in the context of this open model. Some people will never pay, but enough do.

I'm sure this wouldn't work for every niche (I can't see a babe-site done this way), but for our type of content, as for other paysites -we did not invent it-, works well enough to be scaled.:2 cents:

media 02-01-2012 05:50 PM

I already made up my mind that I wont read the replies because it will be like pages from a book...

ilnjscb 02-01-2012 07:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alf6300 (Post 18728178)
Hey ilnjscb


In any breakthrough, there are Schumpeter's losers and winners.


:):) Creative Destruction, Yeah!

Or you could call it massively disruptive. Either way you are right, the reality dictates the response.

papill0n 02-01-2012 07:46 PM

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Dirty Dane 02-01-2012 08:05 PM

There are many tube models.

Konda 02-01-2012 10:12 PM

I rather have 1,000,000 visitors a day converting 1:10,000 than having 10,000 visitors converting 1:500 ....

Paul Markham 02-02-2012 01:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colmike7 (Post 18727700)
Also, saying that conversion ratios are much worse than they used to be is mostly because there are tons of more affiliates these days to compete with, lots more website out there because of lower hosting costs/freehosts/easier to make now, faster internet connections, better longer videos for people to get off to, people got wise to file sharing, oversaturation of porn on the internet makes paying for porn seem pointless, etc..

I'm curious how the big paysites are doing in terms of conversion ratios since there aren't thousands of affiliates bringing in different numbers..

I wish I was in this business in the 90s, but I was still a kid.. :(

Ask the people who shoot for them. This is what I see. Most of the big ones are still doing very well, it's the layer under them that are not doing so well. They are cutting back. The small are suffering the worse. And this is absolutely normal in times like this, the big can trim a few people or not, get more aggressive or not. All we know for sure was a company thought of as big, when they went public the truth was out.

This is something I posted on another board. In a famine the weak suffer first, if the famine continues, then the stronger suffer, if the famine isn't stopped even the biggest die. Think in terms of a river drying up. A river of people willing to pay at the door.

Please don't debate this with PJ. This debate is so over his head it's amazing. He missed the obvious when using Coke ads as a comparison.

Paul Markham 02-02-2012 01:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stocktrader23 (Post 18727817)
He didn't respond with a single point at a time so once again no progress was made in the evolution of Paul.

On that note, did he stop trolling around all the other threads last night or was he pulling a double? :glugglug

I didn't reply with a single point you wanted to hear. Here's the crux of the problem.And I will display PJ's stupidity in posting it.

Coke advertise of NBC, for instance or for NBC read where ever they do advertise.

Do NBC buy, create and own the content or the license for the content on all their station?

Does the fee Coke pay contribute to NBC's acquisition of content?

How many of the sites you sell traffic from own or create the content on their sites?

Or on a piracy forum how many of the posters own the content they are linking to?
And 1,000s sometimes millions of people are downloading. Which is the traffic you're selling.

How much of what you pay for content goes to the acquisition of content?

My point is, you can't afford to buy the content you rely on to get traffic.

Quote:

Who brought up these pirate tubes anyhow? Irrelevant to the topic.
Because it defeats your argument. Of course piracy sites are relevant. They give away free porn, they don't pay for and sell ad space to traffic people.

Paul Markham 02-02-2012 01:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by crucifissio (Post 18727871)
What is wrong with the pirate tube model is that times are changing in favor of pay sites. ACTA/SOPA/PIPA whatever will soon be passed in one form or another. "Safe haven" means nothing if they block your payment processor or traffic to the USA and Euro. It's a dying business model. It's like investing in VHS video tapes.

The time of quality pirate tubes will soon be over. Too much waves are coming and the pirate boat is taking in water already. It will be to easy to take them out. Why invest money, as an affiliate or even as an owner, in a failing model when you can invest in quality content?

Which I believe is why so many are against it. Recently a rep of a big cam site was swearing blindly the ads on a piracy site were affiliates. A few emails and I found out the truth. They only sell adverts and don't go the affiliate route. Will Pornhub or any Tube be an affiliate or sell ad space?

I'm off to walk the dog. Waiting for ST23 to say my replies are too long, therefore he thinks they are wrong. It's like saying getting hit with a hammer doesn't count and it's only strikes with a feather that do. :1orglaugh

Cherry7 02-02-2012 02:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by alf6300 (Post 18728178)
Hey ilnjscb
Both music and porn come largely for free, and this is mostly due to the technology. Digital is cheap, convenient, and easily reproduced.
One may like such technology or dislike it: but the traditional music industry has crashed frontally while disliking it. In the meanwhile, though, the very same music revolution helped Apple become the most valuable company in the world.

In any breakthrough, there are Schumpeter's losers and winners.


.:2 cents:

There has been a music counter revolution, the price of music has fallen and so has the number of bands being signed, the number of albums recorded. If the money does not return to the creative content makers the industry will die. Apple has become rich but they don't make music.

Paul Markham 02-02-2012 02:22 AM

While out walking I was thinking about the effects of a law like SOPA. This is one possibility and makes it clear why so many are against it.

The one thing piracy sites do is generate enormous numbers of traffic. People have said that a Tube is more likely to get a million surfers than a paysite. If the tube is 100% legal and like NBC owns all it's content or the license then fine. If it relies on "user uploads" to get that traffic then it's feeding off the content industry to get traffic to sell and earn a living.

If a person, we will call him Traderstock, after a law like SOPA is passed relies on sites like Tubes who accept "user uploads" he might find himself in the dock. Also this goes for sites buying ad space on sites like.

pornbb.org, Forumophilia which has our friend papillon running it allegedly, dumpstersluts.com, thepornlist.net, porno-maniac, fritchy.com, porn-w.org, and so many more it's staggering. So these Tubes and forums won't have anywhere to link to or be able to use any content they like. They will whither and die. Along with the people leeching off the content, like ad space sellers or traffic guys.

Will it stop free porn? No Manwin and a few others are big enough to buy content, lets face it the cost of content has been driven into the ground. So the places that will benefit are the legal Tubes and legal Forums. They will have to monitor heavily, but the added traffic = profit will soon cover that. Roald will have to employ people to approve every post or filter in the companies that can be talked about and linked to. As most of the file lockers will be long gone, it will be easier.

Traderstock, well he will be between a hard place and a rock.

This post doesn't point fingers at the innocent. The guilty can complain about the wall of text. :1orglaugh

porno jew 02-02-2012 02:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18729029)
Forumophilia which has our friend papillon running it

really? proof or ban.

DamianJ 02-02-2012 03:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cherry7 (Post 18729021)
There has been a music counter revolution, the price of music has fallen and so has the number of bands being signed, the number of albums recorded. If the money does not return to the creative content makers the industry will die. Apple has become rich but they don't make music.

There are more musicians now reaching a larger audience and recording more albums than ever before.

Sure, the big labels that didn't adapt to the revolution are suffering. Boo hoo.

Music is in the best state it's been in for decades creatively as people are empowered to release material without EMI screwing them over.

bjlover 02-02-2012 03:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cherry7 (Post 18729021)
There has been a music counter revolution, the price of music has fallen and so has the number of bands being signed, the number of albums recorded. If the money does not return to the creative content makers the industry will die. Apple has become rich but they don't make music.

Mass commercial shitty pop music is finally dying and good quality well written bands and music are doing well better than ever.

You might want more X Factor and boy bands. People with any interest in music, don't

bjlover 02-02-2012 03:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18729029)
Forumophilia which has our friend papillon running it

You have proof of that?

sixsax 02-02-2012 03:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18729121)
There are more musicians now reaching a larger audience and recording more albums than ever before.

Sure, the big labels that didn't adapt to the revolution are suffering. Boo hoo.

Music is in the best state it's been in for decades creatively as people are empowered to release material without EMI screwing them over.

Yes, the days of Metallicas are over, the days of Justin Biebers are here.

porno jew 02-02-2012 03:43 AM

now paul is trying to get papillon investigated by internet the cyber crimes division and interpol for internet piracy. the man has no shame or morals.

gideongallery 02-02-2012 05:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cherry7 (Post 18729021)
There has been a music counter revolution, the price of music has fallen and so has the number of bands being signed, the number of albums recorded. If the money does not return to the creative content makers the industry will die. Apple has become rich but they don't make music.

it has by cutting the middle men studio out of the mix

http://www.kickstarter.com/discover/...ic?ref=sidebar

stocktrader23 02-02-2012 06:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18728988)
Which I believe is why so many are against it. Recently a rep of a big cam site was swearing blindly the ads on a piracy site were affiliates. A few emails and I found out the truth. They only sell adverts and don't go the affiliate route. Will Pornhub or any Tube be an affiliate or sell ad space?

I'm off to walk the dog. Waiting for ST23 to say my replies are too long, therefore he thinks they are wrong. It's like saying getting hit with a hammer doesn't count and it's only strikes with a feather that do. :1orglaugh

http://i.imgur.com/gGLLV.jpg

Affiliates buy ads too Paul. :1orglaugh

stocktrader23 02-02-2012 06:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18729029)
While out walking I was thinking about the effects of a law like SOPA. This is one possibility and makes it clear why so many are against it.

The one thing piracy sites do is generate enormous numbers of traffic. People have said that a Tube is more likely to get a million surfers than a paysite. If the tube is 100% legal and like NBC owns all it's content or the license then fine. If it relies on "user uploads" to get that traffic then it's feeding off the content industry to get traffic to sell and earn a living.

If a person, we will call him Traderstock, after a law like SOPA is passed relies on sites like Tubes who accept "user uploads" he might find himself in the dock. Also this goes for sites buying ad space on sites like.

pornbb.org, Forumophilia which has our friend papillon running it allegedly, dumpstersluts.com, thepornlist.net, porno-maniac, fritchy.com, porn-w.org, and so many more it's staggering. So these Tubes and forums won't have anywhere to link to or be able to use any content they like. They will whither and die. Along with the people leeching off the content, like ad space sellers or traffic guys.

Will it stop free porn? No Manwin and a few others are big enough to buy content, lets face it the cost of content has been driven into the ground. So the places that will benefit are the legal Tubes and legal Forums. They will have to monitor heavily, but the added traffic = profit will soon cover that. Roald will have to employ people to approve every post or filter in the companies that can be talked about and linked to. As most of the file lockers will be long gone, it will be easier.

Traderstock, well he will be between a hard place and a rock.

This post doesn't point fingers at the innocent. The guilty can complain about the wall of text. :1orglaugh

Keep insinuating I run a pirate site Paul. Keep it up.

DamianJ 02-02-2012 07:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sixsax (Post 18729139)
Yes, the days of Metallicas are over, the days of Justin Biebers are here.

Yup. It means ANYONE can post some videos and tracks up and become a massive massive success without giving most of their money to Universal for doing not very much.

Good news.

porno jew 02-02-2012 07:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18729886)
Yup. It means ANYONE can post some videos and tracks up and become a massive massive success without giving most of their money to Universal for doing not very much.

Good news.

if you were a diy artist or knew any you would know how insanely difficult it is to get through the noise that is out there now. it's fantasy that you just put up your art on youtube and itunes and get noticed. about the same amount of people get "big" off youtube and itunes that did in the record contract era, just the mediums have changed.

how is a musician that doesn't play live or not tour make money now for example.

the new avenues have their own pitfalls, just as many as the old way did.

many artists happily sign with the evil music companies as well when their youtube video gets big enough.

it is a complex phenomenon and both side argue from these ridiculously oversimplified viewpoints it just makes the who discussion useless.

porno jew 02-02-2012 07:58 AM

http://s3.amazonaws.com/infobeautifu...ng_out_550.png

Paul Markham 02-02-2012 08:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stocktrader23 (Post 18729643)
Keep insinuating I run a pirate site Paul. Keep it up.

Your side of the debate is losing.

Do you pay towards the content on the sites you buy traffic from?

How do you know none of those sites have pirated content on?

SOPA or a law like it will hit the piracy sites with a sledge hammer. The days of the File lockers and the forums linking to them will be gone. Well lets hope they are. The days of user uploads will largely be over. The big traffic sites will have to rely on content they own, have licensed or very sure the uploader is legit.

This is the same rules that apply to the rest of the world and no law has been passed saying the Internet is exempt of these laws.

So the effect on traffic on the piracy sites, those feeding off them and the surfers will be huge. The traffic will not all disappear. Most will go to places where there's legal content. iTunes, legal DVD stores, legal Tubes. Legal porn Tubes. Which is very likely to be the big guys, Manwin level will be fine. Now with so many people losing out on the cheap traffic, will they give up and do without or will they go to legal Tubes to get traffic. Then what will these sites charge, as they no longer compete with all the piracy porn sites for traffic buyers?

I suspect we will see a hike in the price of traffic. And a lot of traffic sellers unable to get their foot in the door. Maybe some site owners will turn their paysites into free tubes, might be more profitable. Should that happen I might think about it.

Damian the record industry isn't spending a lot of money trying to reduce the piracy of their music, because piracy is bringing them in more money.

The demise of File lockers will be a great opportunity for some bright young thing to show you how wrong this is.

Quote:

Yup. It means ANYONE can post some videos and tracks up and become a massive massive success without giving most of their money to Universal for doing not very much.

Good news.
By opening a legal site where bands can promote themselves. You need to think outside your box sometimes to see the opportunities coming. Do you have the money to do this?

I do. :thumbsup

Jakez 02-02-2012 08:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
if you were a diy artist or knew any you would know how insanely difficult it is to get through the noise that is out there now. it's fantasy that you just put up your art on youtube and itunes and get noticed. about the same amount of people get "big" off youtube and itunes that did in the record contract era, just the mediums have changed.

how is a musician that doesn't play live or not tour make money now for example.

the new avenues have their own pitfalls, just as many as the old way did.

many artists happily sign with the evil music companies as well when their youtube video gets big enough.

it is a complex phenomenon and both side argue from these ridiculously oversimplified viewpoints it just makes the who discussion useless.

As far as the hip hop industry goes at least, the internet has most definitely made it easier for artists to get their name out to the masses easier, faster, and cheaper. It's not even arguable. Spend like $10,000 or less and you can get a prime spot on worldstarhiphop, datpiff, etc. and reach millions of people instantly and possibly blow up over night. Surely the same can be said for other genres.

porno jew 02-02-2012 08:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jakez (Post 18730097)
As far as the hip hop industry goes at least, the internet has most definitely made it easier for artists to get their name out to the masses easier, faster, and cheaper. It's not even arguable. Spend like $10,000 or less and you can get a prime spot on worldstarhiphop, datpiff, etc. and reach millions of people instantly and possibly blow up over night. Surely the same can be said for other genres.

can't really think of anything comparable to those sites in other genre's. if there a metal version? dunno.

Cherry7 02-02-2012 08:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18729886)
Yup. It means ANYONE can post some videos and tracks up and become a massive massive success without giving most of their money to Universal for doing not very much.

Good news.

48 hours or more of material up loaded every minute, the chances of it being found slim to non existent.

You ignore the contribution of the sound engineer, the sound mixer, the soloist musicians hired in, the people who know how to arrange, compose and record music.

A guy on his own on his own computer lacks the knowledge and experience that had been accumulated by an industry.

Jakez 02-02-2012 08:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18730113)
can't really think of anything comparable to those sites in other genre's. if there a metal version? dunno.

Yeah I was going to say something like that. The hip hop genre is kind of in a league of its own as far as the mass of legally free music that is posted online daily. I'm really not sure why there aren't similar sites for all other genres? I guess they just do not create the same amount of music and/or don't believe in giving it out for free to get started.

DamianJ 02-02-2012 08:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
if you were a diy artist or knew any you would know how insanely difficult it is to get through the noise that is out there now.

And it was equally hard to get signed to a major.

At least now everyone has a chance.

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
it's fantasy that you just put up your art on youtube and itunes and get noticed.

Well it worked for Beeeeeber.

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
about the same amount of people get "big" off youtube and itunes that did in the record contract era, just the mediums have changed.


Yup. And now people don't need to give so much of a % to the majors.

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
how is a musician that doesn't play live or not tour make money now for example.


Why would a musician not play live? That's the fun part.

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
the new avenues have their own pitfalls, just as many as the old way did.


Indeed they do. Can't see anyone suggesting otherwise.

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
many artists happily sign with the evil music companies as well when their youtube video gets big enough.


Again, can't see anyone suggesting otherwise.

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18729918)
it is a complex phenomenon and both side argue from these ridiculously oversimplified viewpoints it just makes the who discussion useless.

Most discussions here are useless.

porno jew 02-02-2012 08:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18730132)



Yup. And now people don't need to give so much of a % to the majors.

yep now they just give it to apple or amazon.


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