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The rise of informal news networks
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The rise of informal news networks
“Once the goal is no longer to recreate news organizations as they existed in the past, but rather to ensure that reliable news and information flows — that there is a place in people’s lives for deliberation and debate — then possibility blossoms.”
By Heather Chaplin
The media industry adopts an insurgent strategy
“Insurgents succeed because they know exactly what they are fighting against.”
By Saba Long
New dimensions for news storytelling
“The bold headline grabs your attention, and then becomes a gateway to deeper exploration and understanding.”
By Kawandeep Virdee
Readers will seek out well-moderated spaces
“There are good comments sections online, but they’re never an accident.”
By Scott Lamb
Breaking old habits
“If hospital and prison chaplaincy work taught me anything, it’s that, unfortunately, crisis is a precursor to this kind of change.”
By Andrea Faye Hart
The darkness that democracy dies in is here
“This election was decided in no small part by voters who believed a number of false things about the candidates and the country. The Fourth Estate has failed.”
By Carrie Brown
There’s no “Trump Bump” (and that’s good!)
“We don’t need to sustain our astonishment or tap into our own panic and worry every time he says or does something heretofore unfathomable. (After all, it’s all fathomable now?)”
By Hillary Frey
Journalists build the AI tools they actually want to use
“Journalists who were and remain rightfully skeptical of AI and its impact on our profession — from eliminating jobs to adding to the public’s souring on our trustworthiness — are starting to build stuff. Good stuff.”
By Retha Hill
We’ll rethink scale, trust, and our life’s work
“There is a single crisis in journalism, and from it all other problems emanate: money.”
By S. Mitra Kalita
Using AI to make news more accessible
“AI-driven accessibility isn’t only better product design but also good business.”
By Chitranshu Tewari
Media companies will love their websites a lot less
“Websites aren’t where audiences or advertisers are increasingly investing their time or budgets. The patterns in traffic and ad dollars say as much.”
By Jonathan Hunt
An authoritarian anti-journalism playbook
“The best, most rigorous journalism in the world is powerless to effect change unless it reaches and is trusted by the wider public — however profitable it may be to serve a niche, hyper-engaged subset of the public.”
By Benjamin Toff
We can’t predict the future — but it’s essential to plan for it
“In our increasingly complex world, to really think about the future of news, we have to think across disciplines: technology platforms, youth trends, global public health, and civic institutions.”
By AX Mina
The year we stop talking about “AI”
“Rather than worrying about AI taking away jobs or isolating us further in society, the best media products will help us connect and be more human.”
By Burt Herman
Journalism faces a reckoning, in Soviet style
“Much like the state-controlled media systems of the late Soviet Union, the mainstream media has become the nomenklatura of our era — privileged, insular, and increasingly out of touch with the realities of the populations they claim to serve.”
By Izabella Kaminska
Dow Jones negotiates AI usage agreements with nearly 4,000 news publishers
Earlier this year, the WSJ owner sued Perplexity for failing to properly license its content. Now its research tool Factiva has negotiated its own AI licensing deals.
By Andrew Deck
There’s now a way for journalists to verify their Bluesky accounts through their employers (while still keeping control of them)
It may be too late for @edwardrmurrow.cbsnews.com, @huntersthompson.rollingstone.com, or @mikewallace.60minutes.com, but today’s reporters have another way to prove who they are on the rapidly growing social network.
Tuning out TV news might be behind the decline in media trust. (No, really!)
But: “Does falling trust cause people to change their media use, or do changing media habits cause lower trust?”
What We’re Reading
Knight First Amendment Institute
We looked at 78 election deepfakes. Political misinformation is not an AI problem.
“Is it just a matter of time until improvements in technology and the expertise of actors seeking to influence elections lead to more effective AI disinformation? We don’t think so.”
BBC / Graham Fraser
BBC has complained to Apple over a false headline generated by new AI feature
“This week, the AI-powered summary falsely made it appear BBC News had published an article claiming Luigi Mangione, the man arrested following the murder of healthcare insurance CEO Brian Thompson in New York, had shot himself. He has not.”
The Verge / Nilay Patel
YouTube quietly made some of its web embeds worse, including ours
“Somewhat straightforwardly, YouTube has chosen to degrade the user experience of the embedded player publishers like Vox Media use, and the only way to get that link back is by using a slightly different player that pays us less and YouTube more.”
The New Yorker / Kyle Chayka
The year creators took over
The attention economy has dominated the Internet for more than a decade now, but never before have its protagonists felt so central to American life–or had such direct access to the levers of power.”
Axios / Sara Fischer
Time unveils new AI chatbot
“The Time AI chatbot allows users to ask questions about the story, summarize it into digestible bits of different lengths, translate the text into different languages, or play audio versions of the copy. It can translate the article into German, Spanish, French, Russian, Ukrainian and Mandarin. In addition to the 2024 Person of the Year story about President-elect Donald Trump, the new chatbot has also been prepared to answer questions about the previous three years’ winners — Taylor Swift, Volodymyr Zelensky and Elon Musk.”
Medill Local News Initiative / Mark Caro
Can Massachusetts hyperlocal startups reconnect communities to the news – and each other?
“These startups in Brookline and Marblehead and Newton and Needham and Concord—these are wealthy communities, by and large. You don’t see it in the gateway cities like Lawrence and Lowell and Chelsea—’gateway city’ being defined as a mid-size urban area that was once an industrial hub and is coming back. So that’s an issue. You also don’t see it in rural towns. It’s tough. It’s harder when you don’t have an NPR-like donor base.”
The Verge / Kylie Robison
Inside the launch – and future – of ChatGPT
“We’ve gotten pretty sidetracked by just making the chatbot great, but really, it’s not what we meant to build. We meant to build something much more useful than that.”
MIT Technology Review / Melissa Heikkilä
Bluesky has an impersonator problem
“Both accounts were eventually deleted, but not before trying to get me to set up a crypto wallet and a ‘cloud mining pool’ account. Knight and Marx confirmed to us that these accounts did not belong to them, and that they have been fighting impersonator accounts of themselves for weeks.”
The Wrap / Raquel 'Rocky' Harris
New York Times Tech Guild reaches tentative 3-year deal one month after ending strike
“The agreement stands as the first for the Times Tech Guild, the largest union of tech workers with collective bargaining rights in the country, which represents nearly 6,000 media workers and two other units at The New York Times.”
Status / Oliver Darcy
CNN’s déjà view
“Officially, correspondents have been told that the strategy is aimed at freeing them up to do more reporting throughout the day…That said, staffers inside the network very much harbor suspicions that leadership is actually on the hunt for areas in the business to cut costs, particularly with painful layoffs on the horizon.”
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.