Consortium News Has Been on the Web Longer Than Salon by 5 Days & NYT, LAT, WSJ and WP By Months, Making it Tied for 10th Longest Active Website Thanks to Our Readers’ Generosity

Thanks to 25 years of generosity from our readers, Consortium News is one of the longest, continuously running websites in history, and arguably the world’s first online news site on the internet.

Earliest surviving article of “The Consortium” Dec. 31, 1995. How Clinton prosecutors intimidate defense lawyers in an Iraqgate prosecution. (12-31-95) https://consortiumnews.com/archive/story1.html

By Joe Lauria
Special to Consortium News

In terms of the internet, November 1995 is ancient history. That’s when Robert Parry founded this website as an alternative to the repressive consensus of the mainstream media, all of which at the time was still available only on paper.

Consortium News appeared two months before The New York Times launched its website on Jan. 22, 1996.  The Los Angeles Times launched on April 8, 1996 and  The Wall Street Journal first published online on April 29, 1996, introducing the first “pay wall” (CN has always been free.)  The Washington Post went online in June 1996. 

Parry wrote that the first edition of this website went live “on or about Nov. 15,” 1995.  The Post registered its domain name at nearly the same time, on Nov. 13, 1995, but after a failed attempt to launch an online depository of articles called “Digital Ink,” the Post‘s website would not appear until seven months later.

Please Contribute to Consortium News’ 25th Anniversary Spring Fund Drive

In 1974, the (PLATO) News Report was published online at the University of Illinois on the  PLATO system.  In 1987, a Brazilian newspaper, Jornaldodia, was published on the state-owned Embratel network. There was an experiment as early as 1980 with Compuserve to deliver 11 newspapers electronically to the few people who had personal computers then. The text of an entire newspaper would take two to six hours to download (after 6 pm) and cost up to $30. 

 

The World Wide Web, or the internet, was created in 1990, making online newspapers feasible. Just five years later Consortium News was launched, establishing it as arguably the first stand-alone, internet news site in history. Just five days later, on Nov. 20, 1995 Salon published its first online edition as salonmag.com.  In Britain the first internet news site was the Weekend City Press Review, begun sometime in 1995.

According to the list of the oldest still active websites, found on the Thought Catalog, none of the sites older than CN were devoted to news.  Two ongoing websites that started in 1995 occupy the tenth spot. Neither Consortium News nor Salon is mentioned. 

Fourteenth on the list is the Bob Dole-Jack Kemp ’96 presidential campaign website, which is incredibly, still on line.  

Parry’s website, constructed by his son Sam Parry, is an experiment that has surely stood the test of time.  It is an achievement that could not have been accomplished without the generous support of our readers over these many years. Please take part in this ongoing venture with a tax-deductible donation to our 25th Anniversary Spring Fund drive, as we embark on our next quarter century.

Please Contribute to Consortium News’ 25th Anniversary Spring Fund Drive

Donate securely with PayPal here

Or securely by credit card or check by clicking the red button:

Joe Lauria is editor-in-chief of Consortium News and a former correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, Boston GlobeSunday Times of London and numerous other newspapers. He began his professional career as a stringer for The New York Times.  He can be reached at [email protected] and followed on Twitter @unjoe .

1 comment for “Consortium News Has Been on the Web Longer Than Salon by 5 Days & NYT, LAT, WSJ and WP By Months, Making it Tied for 10th Longest Active Website Thanks to Our Readers’ Generosity

  1. Don Dickson
    May 23, 2020 at 17:09

    We recently made a modest $50 (OK, it was Cdn$50, so let’s call it $40) contribution to this year’s CN fund drive. We would give more if we could. If only 1,000 people contribute the same paltry amount, the target is met.

    We need Consortium News. This is a small cost to bear for something so vital.

    Let’s go for $80,000.

Comments are closed.