Here's a question that no one has asked yet:<p>Why should content sites be compensated at all?<p>When I first read this topic, I thought it was content sites as in nytimes going into Iraq and reporting on the war or netflix/ireel streaming hollywood movies or other such original content.<p>But really, what we're talking about here, is review sites. Personally, I could start a review site on stuff I liked for almost 0$. I could host it on a server I already co-locate and my peers would trust me simply because they have no reason not to. As soon as you start adding financial incentives, ads at all, you lose a bit of credibility.<p>You do gain that credibility back though by point out exactly what conditions you got the product under (free review product, paid out of your pocket, paid-for review, etc).<p>I don't disregard paid-for positive reviews. I just do more research on them. I'm sure that the future for content sites is to have a few sales people on staff to goad companies into buying paid-for posts which are clearly demarcated as such.<p>I don't care if a post is paid-for as long as the post itself checks out. If I see a post on gizmodo or a more obscure blog such as high-scalability mark itself as paid for I won't say oh that's wrong, I'll say oh that's interesting, better check it out. I'll google it and find many other source and if it seems worth my time try it out myself.<p>Personally, I think it's another avenue for sales, it's just one of the huge number of avenues for the next generation of marketing that is become increasing disconnected from the traditional avenues that have been well studied in the past.