For any online individual content creator, writer, blogger or publishing platform; the rules of the online content game are simple: views = money.
Views don’t just magic themselves into money, however, this money is actually coming from ads shown on the side, tops, bottoms and throughout the middle of websites. Not only do these ads distract from the content - the actual whole purpose of the website - but they make the site look ugly and ruin the brand image and credibility.
In addition to this, what eventually ends up happening is even the titles themselves become a source of exploitation. As the quality or success of an article is determined by the number of clicks/views it gains, more is done to increase its “clickability”. Thus you have a system which rewards outlandish, shocking and exaggerated “clickbait” titles for content filled with ads. And people have got this nailed to a science.
This was not what the Internet was created for and it’s having the effect of a gradual but definite decline in the overall quality of online content.
So that’s why Primas exists - to provide an alternative to this unhealthy system, an alternative that is focused on highlighting quality and with a belief that quality should be the single determining factor in whether something is seen, believed and monetized online.
It works by attaching metadata to content that allows it to be tracked, traced and tested for authenticity. This same method also allows for Internet-wide legally binding intellectual property protection. (for free)
The process is pretty easy, it requires a single email, a brief phone call and a tiny leap of practice faith.
The rewards, however, are numerous.
With a passion for highlighting quality when and where it appears, the Primas team are dedicated to brand building and boosting exposure for individuals and teams putting out quality content. In addition, an economic incentive system based on user engagement - not clicks/views - means teams already putting out content can gain passives income through auto-posting (see above image).
As a general rule, when something seems too good to be true, it most likely is.
Did we just break that rule?
Guess so.
Get started! Follow this 1 step and meaningfully contribute to Restoring Health to the Internet.