In this paper, we study how the presence of a news aggregator affects competition among (horizontally differentiated) newspapers in the Internet. For this purpose, we build a model of multiple issues which allows each newspaper to choose quality on each issue. Our model provides a micro foundation for the service offered by the aggregator and captures both the "business-stealing effect " and the "market-expansion effect " of the aggregator. We find that the presence of the aggregator is likely to lead each newspaper to specialize in the set of issues. In this case, its presence changes quality choices from strategic substitutes to strategic complements, which in turn leads to an increase in the quality of newspapers and an increase in consumer surplus, with an ambiguous effect on newspapers ’ profits. In addition, we find that allowing each newspaper to choose to opt out sharpens our prediction
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