"Digital Media Layoffs: The Erosion of Journalistic Work and Revenue"

TL;DR Summary
Media outlets like Vice have faced concerns about website deletion as they pivot away from traditional journalism, leaving journalists scrambling to save their work. While technical challenges exist in maintaining defunct websites, experts argue that it is not prohibitively expensive to host static page archives. Despite the vital work of organizations and tools to archive the internet, the responsibility should not fall solely on journalists, especially when media executives have been criticized for overpaying themselves while their companies struggle.
- Media layoffs: Why journalists can lose their past work along with their jobs Slate
- Vice's website and its attempt to still make money off of nothing. Slate
- The hollowing out of Vice and BuzzFeed marks the end of the digital media revolution CNN
- Vice Will Cease Publishing on Vice.com and Lay Off ‘Several Hundred’ Staffers, CEO Says Variety
- Yahoo lays off the leaders of Engadget The Verge
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