Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
PressPad, an attempt to bring some class diversity to posh British journalism, is shutting down
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
Feb. 15, 2017, 12:27 p.m.
Business Models
LINK: www.recode.net  ➚   |   Posted by: Laura Hazard Owen   |   February 15, 2017

Recode’s annual media conference, Code Media, took place in California on February 13 and 14, and featured speakers like The Washington Post’s Marty Baron and Stratechery’s Ben Thompson. You can find links to watch video of each of the panels in the posts here, but among the highlights for journalism folks:

Fake news watch: Eddy Cue, Apple’s SVP of software and services, declared that tech companies have to take responsibility for fake news: “Since the majority of news is being read through devices and services through devices, I think we all have a responsibility for it.” Apple’s worked to keep fake news off Apple News. (Cue also briefly mentioned podcasts, as Nick Quah noted yesterday.) Facebook’s VP of partnerships Dan Rose, meanwhile, repeated things the company’s said before: It’s “just getting started” tackling fake news, launching projects like this one. (Rose also skirted the question of whether Facebook is a media company: It’s a platform “where people discover a lot of media content,” never mind that many of them also think of it as a news outlet.) Philip Schindler, Google’s chief business officer, noted that “it’s often very hard to draw the line…between fake news and bad journalism.”

— Marty Baron, editor at The Washington Post, said the paper needs proof that Trump knows he’s lying before it will call a lie a lie. “We should call things false when they’re false. Lie suggests you knew the person knew it was false. If we have evidence of that, we would use that term.” (That’s similar to the position outlined by Wall Street Journal editor-in-chief Gerard Baker in a recent media panel at Harvard.)

— Ben Thompson of Stratechery on his successful subscription model: “People underestimate the scale of the internet. Certainly I work hard, but the amount of work I’m doing today is the exact same amount of work I was doing three years ago. The only difference is my income is 100 times higher. And it’s because that $10 scales, and it scales very, very well.”

Find panel videos and coverage here.

Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
PressPad, an attempt to bring some class diversity to posh British journalism, is shutting down
“While there is even more need for this intervention than when we began the project, the initiative needs more resources than the current team can provide.”
Is the Texas Tribune an example or an exception? A conversation with Evan Smith about earned income
“I think risk aversion is the thing that’s killing our business right now.”
The California Journalism Preservation Act would do more harm than good. Here’s how the state might better help news
“If there are resources to be put to work, we must ask where those resources should come from, who should receive them, and on what basis they should be distributed.”