Always available up until this point has been another account level, the Basic Account. This featured up to six userpics, a small choice of styles and designs, lower functionality and less access to some bells and whistles, but overall it was a good, simple free blog. And most importantly, there were no ads.
After the acquisition of Livejournal by SixApart, another account level was added, the Plus Account, which had some of the bonuses of a Paid account (more userpics, text messaging, more styles available), but with the added presence of ads all over one's journal.
As of now, no new Basic Accounts can be created. Livejournal accounts created prior to March 12, 2008, are eligible to be converted to Basic Accounts, and the current Basic accounts that exist are (thus far) not in danger. According to Jason Shellen, Livejournal's VP of Product Development, "From a product perspective it was more about creating a new registration process that was easier for new users to understand. I'm sure it's been ages since many of you signed up for an account, but it was quite confusing and included a table of options that was not very inviting to new users." He added, "The creation of new Basic accounts is what is being stopped. In fact, one of the reasons contributing to going with Plus instead of Basic was that most users coming through the site were opting for Plus anyway." (He has yet to respond to another user's comment that "Plus is the default setting" as an explanation of why that might be.)
Does this matter to everyone? Not really. Current users of Livejournal are (allegedly) unaffected, and new users would never know the difference unless they were told. Of course this ignores the current users who maintain and create multiple acounts for various reasons; I've got at least seven, including communities. For those of us who have been long-standing members of the Livejournal community, this action (unannounced, no less) once again demonstrates that this isn't the company we originally joined. Livejournal was founded for many reasons, and no, it hasn't always been free. Back in the day, one needed user tokens or the willingness to pay for a two-month subscription minimum to come aboard and play. But we weren't advertised at, and the user tokens allowed us to pass along the love. For something that most of us came at as a free service, the number of Paid and Permanent account on my Friends list alone must have bought Brad Fitzpatrick a new Jaguar. We paid into the system because it was important to us to pass it along, because it was a good networking site, because all the cool fans were there, because we could tell everyone else: "Come join. It's free. And if you like it, you can pay for more."
The creation of the Plus accounts was the first nail in that coffin; users became products to be marketed to advertisers, not customers to be kept satisfied. The repeated retreads of the Terms of Service, subject to the whims of busybody special interest groups, lost Livejournal the respect of fans who'd previously felt they'd found an online home. Many of those Paid and Plus accounts went away in response to the heavy-handed and boneheaded antics of this past summer. Fans migrated, others dug in, hoping the latest storm would pass so we could go back to squeeing.
Now our new overlords have taken away the primary growth source for the site, and have switched our little commune into a commercial site. Brad, $deity love him, is angry about this too. "SUP apparently sees no value in freeloaders not looking at ads, not paying, and oh wait... producing most the content for other members to read, other members who are looking at ads and paying for their accounts."
No pirate songs, guys, but seriously? I'm reaching the point of showing them my bottom and going to Journalfen. What do you think?