It started as a newsletter platform for unknown writers. Now it is becoming a media giant in its own right – with many of the problems it was supposed to avoid

Isabelle Roughol was done with her day job at LinkedIn and was ready to start something of her own. She quit in early 2020 and launched Borderline, a podcast and newsletter aimed at “defiant global citizens”, and to help her build it she became an early user of a new online service: Substack.

Substack has marketed itself aggressively to people such as Roughol as a new type of tech company, one that will let writers build their own brands and communities. The company offers software to help people set up free or paid-for newsletters and promises the people creating them that they can write what they want and that they own their own mailing list and can take it with them if they leave.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘Like slave and master’: DRC miners toil for 30p an hour to fuel electric cars

Congolese workers describe a system of abuse, precarious employment and paltry wages…

Mini Apple shops are set to open inside 17 Target locations across the US

Target is launching mini Apple shops inside 17 of its locations that…

Sergio Mattarella reelected Italy’s president amid deep divisions

80-year-old did not want a new term but was persuaded to stay…

Scammy AI-Generated Books Are Flooding Amazon

When AI researcher Melanie Mitchell published Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking…