Reaper0021 Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 (edited) In response to post #24873139. #24874159, #24874314, #24874474, #24874519, #24874634, #24874639, #24874729, #24874774, #24874924, #24874984, #24875019, #24875044, #24875074, #24875124, #24875219, #24875289, #24875334, #24875454, #24875484 are all replies on the same post.thefinn wrote: I doubt they will drop this.They will do more research than smoking some doobies in the coffee lounge at valve and saying "You know what would be cool ?" then we'll see something similar coming up again in the future.There's way too much money involved for this to go away.Personally, if they'd just add a "donate" button and not try to "sell mods" that might go down better.Vesuvius1745 wrote: With the next TES game, I could see them charging for the Creation Kit, and then setting it so you have to "share" your mods on a specific website they control, and then charging people a flat-access rate to the website.Oh, and I can see them releasing the next TES game even more incomplete than Skyrim. Release a barebones game, make money off it, then let the modders finish your game, and make money off of that too. I bet I've just given some pencil pusher at Bethesda a 3-inch erection.wulfharth wrote: That's called an alpha release, and that happens everyday. Bethesda has always tried hard to keep everyone happy (except with the exclusive DLC period releases). They just wanted to give people who make mods a chance to do it for a living. Shame on them for creating jobs and stimulating the mod community. They should all kill themselves. Right? Should I make a sign protest mod about them offering opportunity?How do I block this guy? The option isn't at the bottom of his posts.wulfharth wrote: Ha! I found out where to do it, but I can't block you Vesuvius1745 because you've never contributed a mod, so you aren't listed as an author.So why again do you feel you have the right to have an opinion on what actual mod contributor's are allowed to do with their mods? You aren't even one of us.Vesuvius1745 wrote: Oh, my mistake. I didn't realize the corporation known as Bethesda was being altruistic, and just wanted to stimulate the economy while at the same time giving amateur mod authors their Big Break. You're not only a glass-is-half-full kind of guy, you're a glass-is-half-full when it's actually empty kind of guy.Instead of trying to make a buck off of mod authors, they should concentrate on making sure the next TES release is stable and complete. Yes, game companies are releasing their games earlier and earlier, and frankly, many gamers are sick of paying to Beta test unfinished products.Vesuvius1745 wrote: Good question, wulth. As someone who paid for Skyrim, I have the same right as the 133,000+ other people who signed the petition given to Bethesda telling them what we thought of this pay-for system.I suspect the pencil pusher who came up with this idea is probably shaking in his boots. Wondering if he will have a job next month. Maybe he's even trolling these forums to test the waters, and not liking what he is seeing. thefinn wrote: Well I am a pretty harsh critic of games, I think Skyrim is one of the best I've played in years.There might've been some bugs at launch, but few are the games you'll find without them and frankly with the size of Skyrim they are to be expected.I don't see how it was "incomplete".wulfharth wrote: @Vesuvius-Instead of telling super successful multi-million dollar corporations with giant and loyal fan bases how to run their businesses, you should go try and make a dungeon or create and add a custom 3D model. I'm sure you'll change your tune very quickly.You have no frame of reference for what it means or takes to be a mod author. Stop telling everyone what to do or what they should do. You aren't qualified.thefinn wrote: The difference being that the question for you is "Can I still get free stuff?" while the question for modders is "Is this a system I find reasonable to work with?"The only saving grace to me was the thought that perhaps I should start putting together my feminine walk mod again to be paid for, or to be the free alternative to the other mod of its' kind. It actually made me think this (for the very small mods I have done) it was in fact my first thought.So it can indeed instill the impetus in modders to mod.However, the drawbacks of the current idea are awful.It leaves the door open for game companies to make mods "steam only" in the future for benefits to the bottom line for instance.wulfharth wrote: The official paid DLC is Steam only. Why not the smaller not official but sanctioned DLC? We always have the Nexus if modders want to choose to throw up an donate button to not get pressed and give free work to the sweet and loving community.thefinn wrote: You're missing the point.They can make the game so that when it runs it only allows mods that steam downloaded.And they would be...1) In their rights to do so.2) getting more profits by doing so and they are corporations you know?Reaper0021 wrote: thefinn is right in that regard. IF THEY WANTED to be tyrannical about it that is.thefinn wrote: And when have you known corporations not to be ?DRM itself had huge backlash at the time... but here it is still.Reaper0021 wrote: I agree with you thefinn. I'll tell you one that isn't and I defy you to say otherwise: CDProjekt Red. But in all aspects of this you're 100% right.Vesuvius1745 wrote: Wulf, your ad hominem aside, I'm not going to post my resume because it's irrelevant. Every person who bought Skyrim (they are called customers) have an absolute right to tell Bethesda what they think of their business practices. It doesn't matter if not a single one of those 133,000 people who signed the petition never wrote a mod, or has not done something YOU think "qualifies" them to giver their opinion. They still get to give it. Of course Bethesda is under no obligation to listen to their customers. In this case they did. They probably also realized what a Hiroshima-type disaster this was, and if they were smart, fired the individual(s) responsible for this abortion of creativity. wulfharth wrote: If Bethesda wanted to be tyrants, they probably wouldn't have out of pocketed to provide and update the creation kit. And that's just for the PC gamers mind you. That is a special gift just to us that is more valuable than any 10 mods on here. You should feel loved and have more faith in them.wulfharth wrote: Vesuvius-You are Bethesda's customer. Not mine. I don't want your made up resume. All I know is that you haven't posted a single mod. You aren't a modder. Why are you telling us what we can do with our work?Reaper0021 wrote: It's not about lack of love or faith. It's about common business practices. A business remains a business as long as it can "TURN A PROFIT" and when it can't no longer (ATARI, Commodore, SEGA, etc.) then it stops becoming a business and becomes a share holders nightmare. All of this is just theory talk...but in the back of my mind I remain cautious about what the future holds.thefinn wrote: Totally agree, if I were going to have love or faith (without going to church) it'd be in the Nexus, not some new system Valve has talked Bethesda into.Vesuvius1745 wrote: I, nor anybody else, is telling mod authors what they can or cannot do with their "work". As Bethesda's customers, we explained to them we did not want a pay-for paradigm for mods. We gave our opinion, which as customers we have every right to give. They didn't have to listen to their customers, but they did. Since Bethesda owns the Intellectual property rights to Skyrim, and mod authors sign their EULA accepting their contract, it is Bethesda who gets to tell mod authors what they can or cannot do with their derivative creations. If a mod author is upset by that, then they should take it up with Bethesda. Or mod for a game that allows paid-for mods. Whining about it here, or getting upset with the people who bought Skyrim and gave their opinion, is not going to be fruitful. And to continue on this point by Vesuvius1745....when I give my $$$$ for anything in this world be it new tires, PC parts, cable T.V./internet, books, food, games, music, etc. I HAVE the right as a paying customer to offer my critique or displeasure or ANYTHING with what I paid for if it doesn't meet my expectations as a customer. I don't have to be a tire manufacturer to offer my opinion that I like Firestone better than the other brands. You make no sense man in your argument. You act as if we are indebted to Bethesda and I can assure you it's the other way around. Kudos given to Vesuvius1745. Edited May 2, 2015 by Reaper0021 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thefinn Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 In response to post #24871504. #24871889, #24872029, #24872299, #24872914, #24873159, #24873254, #24873374, #24873424, #24873614, #24873674, #24873684 are all replies on the same post.darkslayer666 wrote: Dark0ne:Forgive my ignorance on this topic but; Why doesn't Nexus help the modders more?As it stands endorsements don't really do anything, other than boost ego. I'd like some Nexus revenue to go to modders... 1000 endorsements for $100?I don't know, like I said, how much does Nexus generate income, but with it's size I'd wager quite a lot since there's a big traffic here. I mean you got the dough for managers but not for your $$$ generators? Priorities man.Perhaps increase ad's on Nexus to support modders? People will also be more inclined to endorse.I personally think Nexus doesn't take care of their modders much at all, and I don't agree with some of your choices. I know Nexus is a business and it's survival is your priority but no modders = no Nexus.Relying on donations solely while taking 100% of revenue is not going to last forever as you've seen from Steam. And you also asked the modders to put nexus as a provider(which is about 5% of revenue) I mean... I bet they scratched their heads asking when did Nexus give them 5%.I can write more, but as I've said, I'm not much knowledgeable on this subject and would like the communities help on this. I feel like Nexus isn't much better in my eyes.If my post is offensive so be it.. good bye, but I feel like too many people aren't questioning this as well. blackasm wrote: Very well put, as it stands the nexus gets money you could say directly from the effort of modders, as well as you tube mod reviewers, bethesda really only gets hype/publicity through modders. Typically mod authors that generate revenue from their own site would lose out being part of the nexus. I have said it a number of times earlier, but it is a classic case of talented people undervaluing themselves.groupthinker1984 wrote: We aren't questioning it because we know the service being provided here. Free hosting of a vast repository of mods for a growing number of games alongside a free client/mod manager that is regularly updated. You don't have to pay to host and you don't have to pay to download. The people who are paying do so to support nexusmods, not the modders. If we want our money to go to the modders, we will donate to them. Please don't speak for us when you aren't even one of us. Hevymettle wrote: You seem pretty opinionated despite announcing yourself that you had much ignorance on the topic. First and foremost I think it is important that you know that Valve offered this site 5% of their profit if Nexus was listed by the modder as being an aid to them. It was 100% voluntary of of the modder and initiated by Valve, so blaming this site or Dark0ne makes no sense at all.Second, this site was founded on being a hub for modders to do what they like and to have it reach out to an audience. No one was forced to do it and they were even supplied with a program that makes it infinitely easier for people to mod their games. Attacking him as "not caring" about modders or taking advantage of them for not paying is pretty ludicrous. He is paying out the butt just to run this site. Have you even looked at the figures it takes to keep this thing going? Your initial idea was pretty good but it sounds better when you leave out every possible thing that he would have to take into consideration. How easily would the system be abused? (people would find a way to get fake endorsements in the first week, I guarantee it). What happens if the modders start making too much money and the site is losing money offering it to them? Everything here runs the way it was created for and the people that utilize the site have done so for a reason. It isn't a bad idea but you shouldn't over simplify it and then attack someone when you have questionable knowledge on the topic at best. That is especially distasteful when you are responding to a post that he is making about making changes to help modders make money.macintroll wrote: I was asking on the other topic, why a system like youtube could not be added to the nexus ?.Like here ads pay the bills. That's why we have a free service.On youtube you can subscribe to adsense, then showing ads within your videos. Clicks and views giving back some money to each youtubber.Simply adding ads on the mod page, which earnings goes to the modder, can be a way to give some retribution to some good mods with high pages view stats. (9M pages view for SkyUI)Of course with this system only good high rated mods will generate some moneybut neither nexus or any end user have to pay a cent to the "content provider".Lamproly wrote: If I understand you right, macintroll, I don't think a system like that would leave grateful users. The ads in videos are - again - a huge turn-off and I only don't notice them because of adblock. And that's the reason why I turn off adblock on the nexus site, because the ads there aren't distracting or annoying me as much and I can still browse the site freely. thefinn wrote: I think you guys are completely over-guessing what the nexus makes out of running this whole system.As far as the 5% being paid to nexus, for all we know some completely overpaid high-priced lawyer realised there was some kind of infringement possibility in this and paying the nexus SOMETHING could alleviate that, but who knows?Perhaps they really wanted to give something back to the community - although my cynical self just kind of laughs at that idea.macintroll wrote: Quote "I think you guys are completely over-guessing what the nexus makes out of running this whole system."Only servers costs for Nexus are $500.000 / year as stated Dark0ne some time ago.Where do you think the money to pay this comes from ?darkslayer666 wrote: @HevymettleLikewise my friend. You seem like you know the statistics of Nexus's income I take it?I am not attacking Nexus, I am critiquing on the way Nexus is handling the situation. I am proposing ways on how we can keep modders from leaving, even at the expense of users by increasing ads for instance. I never said any of my ideas are soundproof. That is why I asked for communities opinion, and not be barraged.Perhaps I should of with-held my opinion on how I feel, but it's true, Nexus doesn't support the modders one bit as far as my knowledge goes, and giving them tools is like saying a cab-driver should buy his own cab because hey... You say Nexus is trying to help but how? Certainly not out of Nexus's pockets, which I think it should since they bring in the income in the first place.And on the point of "free-hub".. oh please, it's like saying non-profit organizations aren't profiting. Once again, I care less who's profiting, I am simply raising awareness that if Nexus can waste money on one thing but not the other is a little weird to me.But once again, feel free to pick anything apart I'm an open book :).Vesuvius1745 wrote: Why doesn't Nexus do more to help mod authors? Dark0ne has been hosting this site for many years. He's spent countless hours on it, and a countless amount of his own money on something that is basically a labor of love. The amount of traffic this site handles is no small feat, and no small amount of money. Dark0ne has given this resource to mod authors for free to host their files, and you want him to do even more? smhmacintroll wrote: @LamprolyWell i just see this as a way to keep free mods, and modders here. Ads make the internet free currently, anywhere, everywhere else without ads, you pay to access the contents (or to remove the ads)Paid modding is coming what ever you think now, Valve&Bethesda missed the point starting with Skyrim but for sure the next games without an existing user base currently will have paid mods (FO4?)It's a trend and more games companies find this as a new good way to make money.Everyone should also read this by moddb : http://www.moddb.com/news/the-uncertain-future-of-paid-modsLP1 wrote: I think this is a fair point and something that Robin is probably already thinking about. The fact is that for many years several people have actually been able to monetize modding. Youtubers, the Nexus... The only people who have been forbidden from making money off of modding were the mod authors themselves. A model like youtube with ad revenue sharing would be interesting. Any attempt at a model would be interesting. The Nexus does provide a wonderful service, and Robin runs it about as well as could be expected. It's an extremely challenging job. But the Nexus is most decidedly NOT a non-profit entity. I think that is why Robin has been as balanced as he has been in all of this. I think he truly believes in the spirit of open source. On the other hand, he is a big TES fan who has managed to turn his love of mods into a livelihood. Do modders not have the same right to try to do that? It is a complicated situation.I take your point, but I cannot see any real feasible way for the Nexus to put a "share driven" kind of dollar amount on mods, can you ?Like I understand the modder is the one person not getting paid in this system, but I don't see a way to change that. By the same logic, should Gopher be giving kickbacks to modders for the money he makes off Youtube?I just don't see how that'd work. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunshinenbrick Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 In response to post #24871504. #24871889, #24872029, #24872299, #24872914, #24873159, #24873254, #24873374, #24873424, #24873614, #24873674, #24873684, #24875884 are all replies on the same post.darkslayer666 wrote: Dark0ne:Forgive my ignorance on this topic but; Why doesn't Nexus help the modders more?As it stands endorsements don't really do anything, other than boost ego. I'd like some Nexus revenue to go to modders... 1000 endorsements for $100?I don't know, like I said, how much does Nexus generate income, but with it's size I'd wager quite a lot since there's a big traffic here. I mean you got the dough for managers but not for your $$$ generators? Priorities man.Perhaps increase ad's on Nexus to support modders? People will also be more inclined to endorse.I personally think Nexus doesn't take care of their modders much at all, and I don't agree with some of your choices. I know Nexus is a business and it's survival is your priority but no modders = no Nexus.Relying on donations solely while taking 100% of revenue is not going to last forever as you've seen from Steam. And you also asked the modders to put nexus as a provider(which is about 5% of revenue) I mean... I bet they scratched their heads asking when did Nexus give them 5%.I can write more, but as I've said, I'm not much knowledgeable on this subject and would like the communities help on this. I feel like Nexus isn't much better in my eyes.If my post is offensive so be it.. good bye, but I feel like too many people aren't questioning this as well. blackasm wrote: Very well put, as it stands the nexus gets money you could say directly from the effort of modders, as well as you tube mod reviewers, bethesda really only gets hype/publicity through modders. Typically mod authors that generate revenue from their own site would lose out being part of the nexus. I have said it a number of times earlier, but it is a classic case of talented people undervaluing themselves.groupthinker1984 wrote: We aren't questioning it because we know the service being provided here. Free hosting of a vast repository of mods for a growing number of games alongside a free client/mod manager that is regularly updated. You don't have to pay to host and you don't have to pay to download. The people who are paying do so to support nexusmods, not the modders. If we want our money to go to the modders, we will donate to them. Please don't speak for us when you aren't even one of us. Hevymettle wrote: You seem pretty opinionated despite announcing yourself that you had much ignorance on the topic. First and foremost I think it is important that you know that Valve offered this site 5% of their profit if Nexus was listed by the modder as being an aid to them. It was 100% voluntary of of the modder and initiated by Valve, so blaming this site or Dark0ne makes no sense at all.Second, this site was founded on being a hub for modders to do what they like and to have it reach out to an audience. No one was forced to do it and they were even supplied with a program that makes it infinitely easier for people to mod their games. Attacking him as "not caring" about modders or taking advantage of them for not paying is pretty ludicrous. He is paying out the butt just to run this site. Have you even looked at the figures it takes to keep this thing going? Your initial idea was pretty good but it sounds better when you leave out every possible thing that he would have to take into consideration. How easily would the system be abused? (people would find a way to get fake endorsements in the first week, I guarantee it). What happens if the modders start making too much money and the site is losing money offering it to them? Everything here runs the way it was created for and the people that utilize the site have done so for a reason. It isn't a bad idea but you shouldn't over simplify it and then attack someone when you have questionable knowledge on the topic at best. That is especially distasteful when you are responding to a post that he is making about making changes to help modders make money.macintroll wrote: I was asking on the other topic, why a system like youtube could not be added to the nexus ?.Like here ads pay the bills. That's why we have a free service.On youtube you can subscribe to adsense, then showing ads within your videos. Clicks and views giving back some money to each youtubber.Simply adding ads on the mod page, which earnings goes to the modder, can be a way to give some retribution to some good mods with high pages view stats. (9M pages view for SkyUI)Of course with this system only good high rated mods will generate some moneybut neither nexus or any end user have to pay a cent to the "content provider".Lamproly wrote: If I understand you right, macintroll, I don't think a system like that would leave grateful users. The ads in videos are - again - a huge turn-off and I only don't notice them because of adblock. And that's the reason why I turn off adblock on the nexus site, because the ads there aren't distracting or annoying me as much and I can still browse the site freely. thefinn wrote: I think you guys are completely over-guessing what the nexus makes out of running this whole system.As far as the 5% being paid to nexus, for all we know some completely overpaid high-priced lawyer realised there was some kind of infringement possibility in this and paying the nexus SOMETHING could alleviate that, but who knows?Perhaps they really wanted to give something back to the community - although my cynical self just kind of laughs at that idea.macintroll wrote: Quote "I think you guys are completely over-guessing what the nexus makes out of running this whole system."Only servers costs for Nexus are $500.000 / year as stated Dark0ne some time ago.Where do you think the money to pay this comes from ?darkslayer666 wrote: @HevymettleLikewise my friend. You seem like you know the statistics of Nexus's income I take it?I am not attacking Nexus, I am critiquing on the way Nexus is handling the situation. I am proposing ways on how we can keep modders from leaving, even at the expense of users by increasing ads for instance. I never said any of my ideas are soundproof. That is why I asked for communities opinion, and not be barraged.Perhaps I should of with-held my opinion on how I feel, but it's true, Nexus doesn't support the modders one bit as far as my knowledge goes, and giving them tools is like saying a cab-driver should buy his own cab because hey... You say Nexus is trying to help but how? Certainly not out of Nexus's pockets, which I think it should since they bring in the income in the first place.And on the point of "free-hub".. oh please, it's like saying non-profit organizations aren't profiting. Once again, I care less who's profiting, I am simply raising awareness that if Nexus can waste money on one thing but not the other is a little weird to me.But once again, feel free to pick anything apart I'm an open book :).Vesuvius1745 wrote: Why doesn't Nexus do more to help mod authors? Dark0ne has been hosting this site for many years. He's spent countless hours on it, and a countless amount of his own money on something that is basically a labor of love. The amount of traffic this site handles is no small feat, and no small amount of money. Dark0ne has given this resource to mod authors for free to host their files, and you want him to do even more? smhmacintroll wrote: @LamprolyWell i just see this as a way to keep free mods, and modders here. Ads make the internet free currently, anywhere, everywhere else without ads, you pay to access the contents (or to remove the ads)Paid modding is coming what ever you think now, Valve&Bethesda missed the point starting with Skyrim but for sure the next games without an existing user base currently will have paid mods (FO4?)It's a trend and more games companies find this as a new good way to make money.Everyone should also read this by moddb : http://www.moddb.com/news/the-uncertain-future-of-paid-modsLP1 wrote: I think this is a fair point and something that Robin is probably already thinking about. The fact is that for many years several people have actually been able to monetize modding. Youtubers, the Nexus... The only people who have been forbidden from making money off of modding were the mod authors themselves. A model like youtube with ad revenue sharing would be interesting. Any attempt at a model would be interesting. The Nexus does provide a wonderful service, and Robin runs it about as well as could be expected. It's an extremely challenging job. But the Nexus is most decidedly NOT a non-profit entity. I think that is why Robin has been as balanced as he has been in all of this. I think he truly believes in the spirit of open source. On the other hand, he is a big TES fan who has managed to turn his love of mods into a livelihood. Do modders not have the same right to try to do that? It is a complicated situation.thefinn wrote: I take your point, but I cannot see any real feasible way for the Nexus to put a "share driven" kind of dollar amount on mods, can you ?Like I understand the modder is the one person not getting paid in this system, but I don't see a way to change that. By the same logic, should Gopher be giving kickbacks to modders for the money he makes off Youtube?I just don't see how that'd work.You cannot pay for mods, you can only pay for modding. No money for modding can go through Nexus. This is the short version. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jennawatson Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 In response to post #24871519. #24873989 is also a reply to the same post.jennawatson wrote: No doubt that at a glance, it looked to me like someone was trying to saw off the legs of the chair that nexus was sitting in. Taking away the best modders, for money, would have caused people to settle for more lower quality, or fewer good quality, mods. As a result, it would have destabilized The Nexus, over time.Nexus is providing increasingly better content, in many respects, than some of the for-profit gaming businesses.Now we are forced to reflect upon what was in our minds when that happened, and make the choice to do what is "right" in the interest of the majority.Tomorrow is a new day, and New Modders will be born.freedom613 wrote: "Tomorrow is a new day, and New Modders will be born."So it seems we will have to wait about 15 or so years for those New Modders to have the physical maturity to make mods then. Nexus 2030, here we come!LOL. that meant that another person will create a mod, hense, a "modder" is born, not a "person". Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vesuvius1745 Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 In response to post #24871504. #24871889, #24872029, #24872299, #24872914, #24873159, #24873254, #24873374, #24873424, #24873614, #24873674, #24873684, #24875884, #24876184 are all replies on the same post.darkslayer666 wrote: Dark0ne:Forgive my ignorance on this topic but; Why doesn't Nexus help the modders more?As it stands endorsements don't really do anything, other than boost ego. I'd like some Nexus revenue to go to modders... 1000 endorsements for $100?I don't know, like I said, how much does Nexus generate income, but with it's size I'd wager quite a lot since there's a big traffic here. I mean you got the dough for managers but not for your $$$ generators? Priorities man.Perhaps increase ad's on Nexus to support modders? People will also be more inclined to endorse.I personally think Nexus doesn't take care of their modders much at all, and I don't agree with some of your choices. I know Nexus is a business and it's survival is your priority but no modders = no Nexus.Relying on donations solely while taking 100% of revenue is not going to last forever as you've seen from Steam. And you also asked the modders to put nexus as a provider(which is about 5% of revenue) I mean... I bet they scratched their heads asking when did Nexus give them 5%.I can write more, but as I've said, I'm not much knowledgeable on this subject and would like the communities help on this. I feel like Nexus isn't much better in my eyes.If my post is offensive so be it.. good bye, but I feel like too many people aren't questioning this as well. blackasm wrote: Very well put, as it stands the nexus gets money you could say directly from the effort of modders, as well as you tube mod reviewers, bethesda really only gets hype/publicity through modders. Typically mod authors that generate revenue from their own site would lose out being part of the nexus. I have said it a number of times earlier, but it is a classic case of talented people undervaluing themselves.groupthinker1984 wrote: We aren't questioning it because we know the service being provided here. Free hosting of a vast repository of mods for a growing number of games alongside a free client/mod manager that is regularly updated. You don't have to pay to host and you don't have to pay to download. The people who are paying do so to support nexusmods, not the modders. If we want our money to go to the modders, we will donate to them. Please don't speak for us when you aren't even one of us. Hevymettle wrote: You seem pretty opinionated despite announcing yourself that you had much ignorance on the topic. First and foremost I think it is important that you know that Valve offered this site 5% of their profit if Nexus was listed by the modder as being an aid to them. It was 100% voluntary of of the modder and initiated by Valve, so blaming this site or Dark0ne makes no sense at all.Second, this site was founded on being a hub for modders to do what they like and to have it reach out to an audience. No one was forced to do it and they were even supplied with a program that makes it infinitely easier for people to mod their games. Attacking him as "not caring" about modders or taking advantage of them for not paying is pretty ludicrous. He is paying out the butt just to run this site. Have you even looked at the figures it takes to keep this thing going? Your initial idea was pretty good but it sounds better when you leave out every possible thing that he would have to take into consideration. How easily would the system be abused? (people would find a way to get fake endorsements in the first week, I guarantee it). What happens if the modders start making too much money and the site is losing money offering it to them? Everything here runs the way it was created for and the people that utilize the site have done so for a reason. It isn't a bad idea but you shouldn't over simplify it and then attack someone when you have questionable knowledge on the topic at best. That is especially distasteful when you are responding to a post that he is making about making changes to help modders make money.macintroll wrote: I was asking on the other topic, why a system like youtube could not be added to the nexus ?.Like here ads pay the bills. That's why we have a free service.On youtube you can subscribe to adsense, then showing ads within your videos. Clicks and views giving back some money to each youtubber.Simply adding ads on the mod page, which earnings goes to the modder, can be a way to give some retribution to some good mods with high pages view stats. (9M pages view for SkyUI)Of course with this system only good high rated mods will generate some moneybut neither nexus or any end user have to pay a cent to the "content provider".Lamproly wrote: If I understand you right, macintroll, I don't think a system like that would leave grateful users. The ads in videos are - again - a huge turn-off and I only don't notice them because of adblock. And that's the reason why I turn off adblock on the nexus site, because the ads there aren't distracting or annoying me as much and I can still browse the site freely. thefinn wrote: I think you guys are completely over-guessing what the nexus makes out of running this whole system.As far as the 5% being paid to nexus, for all we know some completely overpaid high-priced lawyer realised there was some kind of infringement possibility in this and paying the nexus SOMETHING could alleviate that, but who knows?Perhaps they really wanted to give something back to the community - although my cynical self just kind of laughs at that idea.macintroll wrote: Quote "I think you guys are completely over-guessing what the nexus makes out of running this whole system."Only servers costs for Nexus are $500.000 / year as stated Dark0ne some time ago.Where do you think the money to pay this comes from ?darkslayer666 wrote: @HevymettleLikewise my friend. You seem like you know the statistics of Nexus's income I take it?I am not attacking Nexus, I am critiquing on the way Nexus is handling the situation. I am proposing ways on how we can keep modders from leaving, even at the expense of users by increasing ads for instance. I never said any of my ideas are soundproof. That is why I asked for communities opinion, and not be barraged.Perhaps I should of with-held my opinion on how I feel, but it's true, Nexus doesn't support the modders one bit as far as my knowledge goes, and giving them tools is like saying a cab-driver should buy his own cab because hey... You say Nexus is trying to help but how? Certainly not out of Nexus's pockets, which I think it should since they bring in the income in the first place.And on the point of "free-hub".. oh please, it's like saying non-profit organizations aren't profiting. Once again, I care less who's profiting, I am simply raising awareness that if Nexus can waste money on one thing but not the other is a little weird to me.But once again, feel free to pick anything apart I'm an open book :).Vesuvius1745 wrote: Why doesn't Nexus do more to help mod authors? Dark0ne has been hosting this site for many years. He's spent countless hours on it, and a countless amount of his own money on something that is basically a labor of love. The amount of traffic this site handles is no small feat, and no small amount of money. Dark0ne has given this resource to mod authors for free to host their files, and you want him to do even more? smhmacintroll wrote: @LamprolyWell i just see this as a way to keep free mods, and modders here. Ads make the internet free currently, anywhere, everywhere else without ads, you pay to access the contents (or to remove the ads)Paid modding is coming what ever you think now, Valve&Bethesda missed the point starting with Skyrim but for sure the next games without an existing user base currently will have paid mods (FO4?)It's a trend and more games companies find this as a new good way to make money.Everyone should also read this by moddb : http://www.moddb.com/news/the-uncertain-future-of-paid-modsLP1 wrote: I think this is a fair point and something that Robin is probably already thinking about. The fact is that for many years several people have actually been able to monetize modding. Youtubers, the Nexus... The only people who have been forbidden from making money off of modding were the mod authors themselves. A model like youtube with ad revenue sharing would be interesting. Any attempt at a model would be interesting. The Nexus does provide a wonderful service, and Robin runs it about as well as could be expected. It's an extremely challenging job. But the Nexus is most decidedly NOT a non-profit entity. I think that is why Robin has been as balanced as he has been in all of this. I think he truly believes in the spirit of open source. On the other hand, he is a big TES fan who has managed to turn his love of mods into a livelihood. Do modders not have the same right to try to do that? It is a complicated situation.thefinn wrote: I take your point, but I cannot see any real feasible way for the Nexus to put a "share driven" kind of dollar amount on mods, can you ?Like I understand the modder is the one person not getting paid in this system, but I don't see a way to change that. By the same logic, should Gopher be giving kickbacks to modders for the money he makes off Youtube?I just don't see how that'd work.sunshinenbrick wrote: You cannot pay for mods, you can only pay for modding. No money for modding can go through Nexus. This is the short version.What Sunshine said. Not to mention the Nexus is run at a loss. It's a labor of love, and all that "ad revenue" goes toward the upkeep and running of the site, and it still doesn't cover it all. Nobody is secretly getting rich off of the work of mod authors. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jennawatson Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 "Incentives" is a beautiful idea. I agree with a monthly contest with a fixed pool of money to be split among the winners. Or maybe tools to mod, such as PC hardware. A mod is art. One thing people overlook is that those who receive are as important as those who give, and one needs the other. This is a universal law of nature. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunshinenbrick Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 In response to post #24876359. jennawatson wrote: "Incentives" is a beautiful idea. I agree with a monthly contest with a fixed pool of money to be split among the winners. Or maybe tools to mod, such as PC hardware. A mod is art. One thing people overlook is that those who receive are as important as those who give, and one needs the other. This is a universal law of nature.Check Rebel's post in the following thread to see this idea and others. Comment the post if you think it should be endorsed.http://forums.nexusmods.com/index.php?/topic/2796199-encouraging-users-to-donate-to-authors-on-the-nexus-without-people-resorting-to-begging/page-2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vesuvius1745 Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 In response to post #24876359. #24876429 is also a reply to the same post.jennawatson wrote: "Incentives" is a beautiful idea. I agree with a monthly contest with a fixed pool of money to be split among the winners. Or maybe tools to mod, such as PC hardware. A mod is art. One thing people overlook is that those who receive are as important as those who give, and one needs the other. This is a universal law of nature.sunshinenbrick wrote: Check Rebel's post in the following thread to see this idea and others. Comment the post if you think it should be endorsed.http://forums.nexusmods.com/index.php?/topic/2796199-encouraging-users-to-donate-to-authors-on-the-nexus-without-people-resorting-to-begging/page-2My Dad collects stamps. He spends a lot of time engaging in this hobby of his. The stamps aren't worth anything, and he doesn't get paid for doing it. His "compensation" is the joy of engaging in his hobby.Up until last month, and for the ten years prior, that type of compensation was just fine for people engaging in the hobby of mod creation. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunshinenbrick Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 (edited) In response to post #24876359. #24876429, #24876589 are all replies on the same post.jennawatson wrote: "Incentives" is a beautiful idea. I agree with a monthly contest with a fixed pool of money to be split among the winners. Or maybe tools to mod, such as PC hardware. A mod is art. One thing people overlook is that those who receive are as important as those who give, and one needs the other. This is a universal law of nature.sunshinenbrick wrote: Check Rebel's post in the following thread to see this idea and others. Comment the post if you think it should be endorsed.http://forums.nexusmods.com/index.php?/topic/2796199-encouraging-users-to-donate-to-authors-on-the-nexus-without-people-resorting-to-begging/page-2Vesuvius1745 wrote: My Dad collects stamps. He spends a lot of time engaging in this hobby of his. The stamps aren't worth anything, and he doesn't get paid for doing it. His "compensation" is the joy of engaging in his hobby.Up until last month, and for the ten years prior, that type of compensation was just fine for people engaging in the hobby of mod creation.Problem is how strong can we be against this change. I think our best "battle plan" is to either bend their arms to give better protection rights to all modders and customers, IF they have to be THAT bad then at least they can only do it to something we have not settled an agreement with, then avoid like the plague.The second option (and perhaps least likely) is to try lessen Val's grip on distribution altogether.Last option is race to bottom for Beth. Edited May 2, 2015 by sunshinenbrick Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rbyrne11 Posted May 2, 2015 Share Posted May 2, 2015 I am a mod user. I have been enjoying mods since Morrowind. I can still remember modders names like Korana and Grumpy from that era. I read a couple of posts that made me feel like my opinion as an end user was null. That is like telling your customers to "piss off." Ultimately, we will be the consumers of your mods so I think more end users should chime in. First of all, I would pay for a great mod from an established modder. However, Bethesda would have to pony up utilities that would facilitate this type of sharing. I could not enjoy mods without all of the third party utilities to clean or alter them. If Bethesda were to disable or limit capabilities without providing the resources, it would ruin the fabric that keeps the modding community together. With that said, would I pay for a compatibility mod that brings together two other mods that I already paid for? I think Bethesda should look at Google's revenue model. There is a way to pay for content creators while keeping services free. In fact, the majority of media providers have found ways to generate revenue while keeping services free. The only exceptions are online retailers like Amazon. If I am going to pay for a mod there must be some controls. I don't want to buy a mod that does not work or is not compatible. Free modding communities is what made Morrowind and Oblivion great games for me. I don't want a "pay for mod system" to take the place of the free community. I believe that we lost some great modders because they could no longer support the lifestyle. I think a "pay for mod system" would retain great talent. I think if we can keep the service free but get established modders paid, we can find the balance needed to keep both the modders and end users happy. It should be a blend of free content and paid content. Thanks for all that you do! I feel compelled to donate now. I love my TES games and what NEXUS has provided me over the years. Honestly, I do fear the unknown with this one. However, if it turns out unfavorably for end users... I think my wife would be happier. J/K! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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