<p dir="ltr">Press Release, December 20th 2014. NYC - London.</p>
<p dir="ltr"><b>Daily Paywall</b><br>
<a href="http://DailyPaywall.com">http://DailyPaywall.com</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">Artist<b> Paolo Cirio</b> has hacked the paywalls of the most influential financial newspapers - Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, and The Economist - breaking through their checkpoints every day to liberate over 60,000 pay-per-view items published over the course of 2014. </p>
<p dir="ltr"><b>Now, he redistributes this copyrighted content for free and pays everyone to read it.</b> <br>
His paid-to-read schema is a circular economic model in which profit generated from huge amounts of pirated content is invested into informing and educating the public about institutional crime and corruption, while offering rewards to critical journalists.<br>
<a href="http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/about">http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/about</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">With the massive amount of appropriated content, the artist has created his own online and printed newspaper called Daily Paywall. He has edited 15 issues of his paper covering the main topics of our time. For each issue he has selected featured articles which expose major economic injustices and contradictions. Readers receive $1 for responding correctly to simple questions relating to these articles, thereby incentivizing analytical and critical thinking around the story. <br>
<a href="http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/issues">http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/issues</a><br>
<a href="http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/featured">http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/featured</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">The Daily Paywall newspaper is distributed on the Internet and in printed versions disseminated in undisclosed spots throughout NYC in unauthorized racks for free papers. See Daily Paywall newsracks in NYC.<br>
<a href="http://paolocirio.net/work/daily-paywall/#pics">http://paolocirio.net/work/daily-paywall/#pics</a></p>
<p dir="ltr">Beyond advocating the open circulation of knowledge, the project proposes a creative economic model designed for social and educational aims. The visionary concept behind the artistic performance and these socio-economic matters are introduced in his essay.<br>
<a href="http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/about/#essay">http://DailyPaywall.com/?/l/about/#essay</a><br></p>
<p dir="ltr">Don’t miss another recent project by<i> Paolo Cirio,</i><b><i> Global Direct</i></b>, which outlines and campaigns for a new creative political philosophy:<br>
<a href="http://GlobalDirect.today">http://GlobalDirect.today</a></p>
<p dir="ltr"><b><i>A few shows featuring Paolo Cirio in 2015:</i></b><br>
- Exhibition at Utah Museum of Contemporary Art in U.S.<br>
- Lecture at FutureEverything in Manchester, UK<br>
- Incubation at NEW INC. studio in NYC<br>
- Exhibition at Centre Culturel Bellegard in Toulouse, France<br>
- Solo Show at NOME, contemporary art gallery in Berlin, Germany<br>
- Exhibition at Apexart gallery in NYC<br>
- Exhibition at ISEA2015 in Vancouver, Canada</p>
<p dir="ltr"><i>Current exhibitions with Paolo Cirio’s works:</i><br>
- Open Society Foundation in NYC<br>
- DOX Centre for Contemporary Art in Prague<br>
- Palazzo del Governatore in Parma</p>
<p dir="ltr">Thank you.<br>
Paolo Cirio.<br>
<a href="http://PaoloCirio.net">http://PaoloCirio.net</a><br></p>
<p dir="ltr"><b>Critical text about Daily Paywall by Paolo Cirio</b></p>
<p dir="ltr">A functional democracy needs an informed public. However, today access to knowledge is controlled by for-profit industry, while information is manipulated in its distribution and organization to maintain undemocratic orders. </p>
<p dir="ltr">Daily Paywall proposes a provocative and conceptual economic model for the media and publishing industry, in which the for-profit scheme of information selling and consumption is reversed for democratic and educational purposes, by paying readers to access and understand the news, while directly rewarding critical content creators through bypassing the interfering middleman’s agenda. </p>
<p dir="ltr">In creating Daily Paywall, tens of thousands of articles covering developments in finance, economy and business have been stolen from the mainstream corporate media in order to redistribute them for free, ultimately extracting their value for reinvesting into motivating socio-critical analysis. The articles are made available both online and in print to those who would not typically have access to or be exposed to such material, due to their inability to afford a subscription, or because of how the media ranks the articles or simply as a result of the exclusionary language employed by these news sources. At its core, Daily Paywall proposes that access to this content should be more horizontal and democratic in scope, encouraging and incentivizing consumption and participation by those who are struggling financially, or who occupy a lower class status, as economic volatility and increasing wealth disparity ultimately impacts them the most. </p>
<p dir="ltr">Beyond promoting open access to knowledge, the project also makes a direct provocation regarding the one-directional flow of capital in our current information economy. This is achieved by incentivizing readers to read, absorb, and respond to articles that expose flaws in corporations, governments or other institutional entities. </p>
<p dir="ltr">The newspaper, Daily Paywall, provides a window into our modern time of institutionalized economic exploitations, crimes and conflicts neutralized in the global complexity and super power stakes. The articles are often highly ideological and deceptive, yet they contain facts and details that aren’t presented in popular mainstream culture, showing once again how context can alter the intrinsic value and significance of information. This project, in fact, aims to reconfigure structures of knowledge to unleash new meanings, as well as their social and cultural functions. </p>
<p dir="ltr">By enticing citizens to become informed in exchange for money, Daily Paywall radically shifts the current media paradigm of economic exclusion by providing access and effectively engaging people in a form of public discourse, disrupting contemporary social, economic and media orders, and exploring alternatives to systems of distribution of knowledge. Besides alluding to the media’s role in informing the public, Daily Paywall also addresses the modern speculative industry of education, as paying high tuitions discourages citizens from educating themselves. In opposition, this new paid-to-learn model would empower everyone with financial means and knowledge for greater human progress. </p>
<p dir="ltr">Daily Paywall integrates the highly exploitative and precarious socio-economic order and radically reverses it with a visionary idea about reformulating access to education and motivating social change. As a direct provocation, with subtle ironies woven throughout, Daily Paywall does not seek to redefine the media business, but rather presents a constructive, artistic model for an alternative approach to the distribution of information, education, income and labor. Even though business model logic guides the structure of the project, sustainability and profit are not the goal and have been sacrificed or challenged in favor of ethical, philosophical and social revelations. </p>
<p dir="ltr">Today information flow is the means of exchange for valuing any economic and social entity. Knowledge as an asset and information as currency determine the current economic hegemony and social order. Thus, the creative reconfiguration of the information flow is the ultimate political and artistic practice which can transform and address modern society at large. <br></p>
<p dir="ltr"><b>The Media Performance</b> </p>
<p dir="ltr">The critical aspects of this experiment are recalled as a conflict over information and social control. This conflict is reenacted as a performance through the staging of a striking interaction amongst the actors that the artist involved in the artwork, the corporate targets, the readers, the journalists and the art world. During this temporary setting of the performance, the participants are left to confront and discuss the validity, legality and finality of the artwork. </p>
<p dir="ltr">With the proper timing and preparation, the performance eventually reaches its apex with the social conflict becoming unresolvable, ending with the dramatic suppression of the artwork itself which in turn reveals the real power structures in place. Here, the artistic provocation of Daily Paywall is most explicit and the media performance truly takes place, showing a powerful rupture to the current restrictions over information concerning the important issues that govern society. </p>
<p dir="ltr">Daily Paywall questions contemporary socio-economic dynamics and how they can be rearranged as a form of art practice. This project proposes a direct intervention into the power relations between corporations, media, authorities, individuals and communities. As a mode of engaging and participatory artistic performance, the project has the potential to create symbolic and veritable ruptures within the operations of the financial and information economies, and challenges our complicity with corruption and inequality. As such, the project carries the ability to impact society at large, which is what all socially engaged art, and we as citizens, must strive for. </p>
<p dir="ltr"><i>Essay by Paolo Cirio. 2014</i><br>
</p>