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Drudge launches mobile site, reports busiest month ever [Wireless]December 5th, 2007 at 9:02 pmSource:Valleywag
Glickman says, “The ISP community is going to be at the forefront of this in the future because they have everything to lose and nothing to gain by not seeing that the content is being properly protected.” And here I was thinking it was that Hollywood studios, the ones Glickman represents, with everything to lose and nothing to gain by forcing ineffective protections on its products. ISPs stand on the frontline of the content industry’s war on piracy, true. But they’d seem to have little to gain by taking up Glickman’s fight — until you consider this: Cable Internet providers like Comcast are already in the TV business. AT&T and Verizon are starting to sell TV subscriptions as fast as they can. Blocking file sharing may generate some ill will among Internet customers — but more than ever, ISPs need friends in Hollywood so they’ll have programming to fill their new channels.
I opened the site on my iPhone and got a list of the same headlines that are currently on drudgereport.com, but without ads or the lengthy list of links to news sources and columnists. Clicking a link informs you that the link you clicked may not be formatted for a mobile device and offers to email you the link so you can read it when you get back to your computer. Nifty. In addition to that, the Drudge main page was viewed 455,157,569 times in November — the busiest month in the site’s 12-year history. It’s important to note, however, that that number is pageviews, not unique readers, and the site has an autorefresh set to 3 minutes. If you leave the page open on your computer, as many readers do, you’ll account for 20 views an hour. Even discounting that effect, the site is astoundingly popular for a two-man operation.
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Dan Glickman, head of the MPAA, is calling on Internet service providers to implement
The Drudge Report is the homepage for many news junkies — myself included. That’s likely because Matt Drudge has never really jumped on the Web 2.0 bandwagon — no comments, no voting on stories, no submitting stories (except through the anonymous tips box) for peer review, no videos, no lolcats. The site has pretty much been the same since it launched in the late ’90s — until today!























