They each invested $1,000, totaling $4,000.
They have 7,120 paid subscribers.
The super fan tier costs $1,000 per year, and they have 40 subscribers in this tier.
The primary business model is subscription-based, with additional revenue from ads for free subscribers.
They spend approximately $10,000 per month on overhead costs, including litigation insurance and web hosting.
The initial plan was to operate for four months, from August to January, regardless of revenue, with the founders prepared to pay themselves nothing if necessary.
They gained around 600 subscribers in the first few days after launching.
The ownership is egalitarian, with all four founders being equal 25% owners and paying themselves the same salaries.
They describe their journalism as ground-up reporting from the internet, focusing on communities and how technology impacts humans.
The Shrimp Jesus story is about a bizarre AI-generated image of Jesus with shrimp arms that went viral on Facebook, revealing a scam industry of AI spam on social media platforms.
He shifted focus to Blue Sky because it has a larger user base and offers a more decentralized platform without being too technically complex, unlike Mastodon.
He argues that relying on billionaires to fund media is not sustainable and that media should be independent and not reliant on wealthy individuals.
They avoid long-term investigative projects that require significant time and resources, focusing instead on breaking stories and adversarial reporting.
Lots of people start media companies using money from rich people. Jason Koebler and his colleagues did it themselves, using a grand total of $4,000. That was back in the summer of 2023. Now 404 Media, the tech news + investigations site they started after leaving Vice Media, is a success story. Koebler tells us how they started, how it’s going, and what he’d like to do next.
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