From globeandmail.com:
Some solace for traditional news outlets worried about how to compete with the Internet: A survey finds slowing growth in the number of people who regularly go online for the news.
Almost three in 10 adults, or 31 per cent, regularly log in for news, a rate roughly the same as two years ago, according to the survey released Sunday by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press. People in their 40s were more likely to go online for news than the younger adults.
“The online news audience is maturing and at this point is wider than it is deep,” said Andrew Kohut, director of the Pew Research Center.
“We have as many as 31 per cent who say they read news online regularly,” he said. “But they don't spend as much time doing it as they spend with more traditional media like newspapers, TV and radio.”
Here's the full report.