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Local newsrooms are using AI to listen in on public meetings
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Local newsrooms are using AI to listen in on public meetings
Chalkbeat and Midcoast Villager have already published stories with sources and leads pulled from AI transcriptions.
By Andrew Deck
You can learn a conference’s worth of data journalism through these NICAR tipsheets
From AI to OSINT, maps to the sports section, it’s a data journalism jubilee.
By Joshua Benton
“More alarming by the day”: New York Times investigations editor on the legal threats faced by news publishers
“The rhetoric and actions that Trump and his allies take at a national level are being mimicked across the country at a much smaller level. Whether they’re Trump supporters or not, they’re taking cues from the President of the United States.”
By Sarah Scire
How Trump’s cuts are crippling journalism beyond the United States
According to a USAID factsheet now taken offline, the agency funded training and support for 6,200 journalists and assisted 707 outlets.
By Gretel Kahn, Marina Adami and Eduardo Suárez
This AI tool could give newsrooms “eyes and ears where they don’t have them”
Roganbot, created by two journalists, is the testbed for “visibility tools” that help keep tabs on the internet.
By Neel Dhanesha
Politico Pro wants subscribers doing “deep research” on its site, not on ChatGPT
A good news organization sits atop valuable archives. Why not use them to give readers answers to their questions?
By Joshua Benton
News unions are grappling with generative AI. Our new study shows what they’re most concerned about
We find six areas where news media unions are focusing their generative AI attention and concern — and two where they’re not.
By Mike Ananny and Jake Karr
FiveThirtyEight is shutting down as part of broader cuts at ABC and Disney
Though Nate Silver left in 2023, FiveThirtyEight still offered election forecasts, a presidential approval tracker, and other tools.
By Laura Hazard Owen
The L.A. Times adds AI-generated counterpoints to its opinion pieces and guess what, there are problems
The hope: The L.A. Times will appear more “objective” if it presents both sides of an issue, even if one side’s written by a human and the other side is generated by AI. The reality: Kind of a mess.
By Laura Hazard Owen
Noosphere aims to create a subscription bundle for your favorite journalists’ content
“We decided to build something where the journalist gets credit for bringing someone into the platform, but then that consumer gets everybody.”
By Hanaa' Tameez
A new nonprofit wants to be a soft (and sustainable) landing spot for local news outlets in transition
The nonprofit Newswell, based out of Arizona State University, already owns three local news sites in California: Stocktonia, Times of San Diego, and the Santa Barbara News-Press.
By Sophie Culpepper
Local newsrooms are using AI to listen in on public meetings
Chalkbeat and Midcoast Villager have already published stories with sources and leads pulled from AI transcriptions.
By Andrew Deck
You can learn a conference’s worth of data journalism through these NICAR tipsheets
From AI to OSINT, maps to the sports section, it’s a data journalism jubilee.
“More alarming by the day”: New York Times investigations editor on the legal threats faced by news publishers
“The rhetoric and actions that Trump and his allies take at a national level are being mimicked across the country at a much smaller level. Whether they’re Trump supporters or not, they’re taking cues from the President of the United States.”
What We’re Reading
The Verge / Emma Roth
Newsmax will pay $40 million to settle Smartmatic voting machine allegations
Previously: “Smartmatic settled with One America News last year, while a judge recently ruled to allow its $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox Corp. to continue. Fox News agreed to pay Dominion $787 million in 2023.”
Status / Oliver Darcy
The LA Times faces ethical questions after airing an undisclosed promo for owner Patrick Soon-Shiong’s company
“Some staffers at The Times harbor suspicions that Soon-Shiong is deliberately trying to build separate entities, like LA Times Studios, to shake himself free of traditional journalistic procedures, which he may find to be a nuisance. By doing so, he can leverage The Times’ brand and do what he wants with it, all without facing editorial headwinds from journalists who would, perhaps, not be comfortable reading an advertisement for one of his pharmaceutical companies as a news story.”
Glen Nelson Center
Next Challenge for Media & Journalism will give $200k in grants to media startups
“In 2025, six prizes totaling $200,000 will be awarded to five early-stage media startups. Each division winner will receive a grant of up to $50,000 and will be eligible for an additional $25,000 Grand Prize.” Open to nonprofit and for-profit media companies in the United States. Deadline is March 18.
Substack / Corey Hutchins
An anti-capitalist newspaper takes root on Colorado’s Western Slope
“The Revolutionist, with 132 subscribers as of March 13, has a core group of about a dozen volunteers who help put it out each month.”
Reuters / Jonathan Stempel
News Corp sued by Brave Software, a Google search engine rival
Brave “seeks to forestall a lawsuit by Rupert Murdoch’s company for when readers are directed to copyrighted articles from the Wall Street Journal and New York Post…Brave countered that it is ‘fair use’ to index website content, ‘which all search engine operators must do to exist.'”
CNBC / Hayden Field
OpenAI is asking the Trump administration to make clear it can train AI models on copyrighted materials
“On Thursday, OpenAI submitted its proposal to the U.S. government, emphasizing the need for speed in Al advancement and a light hand from regulators while highlighting its take on the dangers of Al technology coming out of China…OpenAl expressed its distaste for the current level of regulation in Al, calling for ‘the freedom to innovate in the national interest’…rather than ‘overly burdensome state laws.'”
The Wall Street Journal / Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg and Meghan Bobrowsky
She promised not to speak ill of Meta. Then she wrote a tell-all. Now, she can’t talk about it.
“The book, ‘Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism,’ by Sarah Wynn-Williams, details CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s efforts to make inroads in China and levies harassment allegations against former and current executives…An arbitrator ruled Wednesday that Wynn-Williams had to temporarily stop making ‘disparaging, critical, or otherwise detrimental comments’ about the Facebook owner or its employees, after Meta alleged she had violated terms of her 2017 severance agreement, which included a nondisparagement clause.”
Press Gazette / Charlotte Tobitt
Only about 1 in 5 British journalists currently works in the office full-time
“Three days a week in the office appears to be the most common practice according to Press Gazette’s research, with the Financial Times, News UK, The Guardian, Sky News, Future, Haymarket and Ladbible all adopting this hybrid approach.”
The Washington Post / Jeremy Barr
With recent appointments, Fox News enters a new stage of Trump closeness
“Jesse Watters wasn’t afraid to admit it: He’s envious of all of his Fox News colleagues who have gotten plum jobs in the new Trump administration. ‘I’m also a little jealous because I feel like everybody is getting things — ambassadorships, award seats, Cabinet positions,’ he said…’I only asked for a statue. It doesn’t have to be life-sized.'”
The Verge / Nilay Patel
Congress’ new anti-deepfake bill could give Trump another way to target his enemies
“At a high level, her argument is that Trump is much more likely to wield a law like this against his enemies — which means pretty much anyone he doesn’t personally like or agree with — and much more likely to shield the people and companies he considers friends from the consequences. And we know who his friends are: it’s Elon Musk, who now works as part of the Trump administration while at the same time running X, which is full of NCII [non-consensual intimate imagery].”
Nieman Lab is a project to try to help figure out where the news is headed in the Internet age. Sign up for The Digest, our daily email with all the freshest future-of-journalism news.