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Consumer Reports published a kids' version of Consumer Reports called Penny Power in 1980, later changed in August 1990 to Zillions. [48] This publication was similar to Consumer Reports but served a younger audience. At its peak, the magazine covered close to 350,000 subscribers. [49]
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Renewal of a subscription may be periodic and activated automatically so that the cost of a new period is automatically paid for by a pre-authorized charge to a credit card or a checking account. A common variation of the model in online games and on websites is the freemium model, in which the first tier of content is free. Still, access to ...
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Gawker put the site up for sale in November 2008, at the same time it announced the closure of one of its other blogs, Valleywag. Consumerist was purchased by Consumers Union, the publishers of Consumer Reports, in December 2008. [5] The site's two editors, site lead Ben Popken and senior editor Meghann Marco, were retained through the sale.
The print version of the magazine, which only broke even, was ended in 2000 by new leadership at the Consumers Union. [ 4 ] [ 7 ] An online version continued for 2 years with new interactive polls and archived articles from the print magazine at Zillions.org, finally discontinuing in 2007.
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Consumer Reports was established in 1936 to advance the Consumer Movement through product testing and advocating for consumer rights. Today the organization employs 500 people to conduct experiments at its laboratories, report the results, do journalism on consumer issues, and present the consumer perspective in policy discussions.