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Audience editors offer advice for “dispiriting” times in social and search
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Audience editors offer advice for “dispiriting” times in social and search
Journalists assume readers are as obsessed with the news as they are. They’re wrong.
By Sarah Scire
Universities are mapping where local news outlets are still thriving — and where gaps persist
“Just as the local news landscape has evolved, so has local news mapping.”
By Corey Hutchins
The Conversation is trying to make its academia-fueled model work for local news
“I get the challenges small startups face trying to fill this void of local news. So this is our little attempt to support them in our Conversation way.”
By Joshua Benton
Is statehouse reporting set for a revival?
For decades, the narrative about state government reporting has been almost entirely negative — but our new research suggests a turnaround.
By Matthew Powers
Beehiiv is the latest platform to try to lure independent journalists with perks
These types of programs are likely to continue to come and go, as the needs of journalists and the platforms’ businesses evolve.
By Hanaa' Tameez
That time Rupert Murdoch endorsed Jimmy Carter (no, really)
It was the first time many Americans saw Rupert Murdoch using his news outlets to advance his interests — and a lesson in how a media mogul’s outside financial ties can taint the editorial product.
By Joshua Benton
GBH tried to sell the home of a legendary radio station. It kicked off a proxy war for the soul of audio.
“Woods Hole tends to be pretty passionate about things, and when people get startled they get angry.”
By Neel Dhanesha
Let’s fact-check Mark Zuckerberg’s fact-checking announcement
Zuckerberg didn’t mention that a big chunk of the content fact-checkers have been flagging is not political speech, but the low-quality spammy clickbait that Meta platforms have commodified.
By Alexios Mantzarlis
Academics team up to address the biggest challenges in local news research
“A lot of people assume that there is some list somewhere of all the local news outlets in particular places. And that just doesn’t exist.”
By Sophie Culpepper
Audience editors offer advice for “dispiriting” times in social and search
Journalists assume readers are as obsessed with the news as they are. They’re wrong.
By Sarah Scire
Universities are mapping where local news outlets are still thriving — and where gaps persist
“Just as the local news landscape has evolved, so has local news mapping.”
The Conversation is trying to make its academia-fueled model work for local news
“I get the challenges small startups face trying to fill this void of local news. So this is our little attempt to support them in our Conversation way.”
What We’re Reading
Law360 / Philip Bantz
SCOTUSblog publisher indicted today in Maryland on tax evasion charges
“Tom Goldstein, a publisher of SCOTUSblog and one of the most experienced U.S. Supreme Court lawyers in the country, was indicted Thursday in Maryland federal court on charges he schemed to evade taxes for years and used funds from his boutique law firm to cover gambling debts … from ‘ultrahigh-stakes poker’ games.”
The New York Times / Benjamin Mullin
The Washington Post’s new mission: Reach “all of America”
“Ms. Watford, who joined The Post in May, also laid out big-picture goals for the company. Among them: reach 200 million paying users, which the slide deck described as a ‘Big Hairy Audacious Goal,’ or ‘B.H.A.G.'”
The Atlantic / Charlie Warzel
Apps for a warming planet
“The experience of logging on and consuming information through the algorithmic morass of our feeds has never felt more dispiriting, commoditized, chaotic, and unhelpful than it does right now. It is useful, then, to juxtapose this information ecosystem—one that’s largely governed by culture-warring tech executives and populated by attention seekers—with a true technological public good.”
Institute for Nonprofit News
Google and the Institute for Nonprofit News will fast-track grants to local newsrooms reporting on California wildfires
Newsroom do not have to be part of the INN network to qualify. If approved, INN will disburse grants in “as little as 72 hours.”
Wired / Kate Knibbs
That sports news story you clicked on could be AI slop
“At a moment when trust in media has plummeted and many news outlets have seen revenue decline, this type of slop content mill ring is a double whammy. It pollutes the information ecosystem with junk and stolen writing, and it siphons off programmatic advertising revenue from legitimate content producers.”
X / Ben Mullin
More than 400 Washington Post journalists send plea to owner Jeff Bezos to intervene at the paper
“This goes far beyond the issue of the presidential endorsement, which we recognize as the owner’s prerogative.”
Press Gazette / Dominic Ponsford
New digital daily newspaper for London set to launch
“The team behind London Daily Digital say they plan to launch the title next month (February) as a website and a page-turning daily digital edition. It is also planned for the title to have a monthly print edition priced at £5 with a run of 100,000 copies.”
TechCrunch / Kyle Wiggers
Google inks deal with the Associated Press to bring more real-time info to Gemini
“Jaffer Zaidi, Google’s VP of global news partnerships, said that the goal is to ‘further enhance the usefulness of results’ in the Gemini experience.”
The New Yorker / Doreen St. Félix
Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, and the collapse of the Hollywood #MeToo era
“The late 2010s genre of #MeToo reportage cannot thrive on today’s volatile internet. Information is misinformation and vice versa. Victims are offenders and offenders are victims. The word that comes up again and again in all the internet litigation of Lively v. Baldoni is ‘narrative.’ Abuse seems to be far from anyone’s mind.”
Platformer / Casey Newton
Meta just flipped the switch that prevents misinformation from spreading in the United States
“When the company announced on Jan. 7 that it would end its fact-checking partnerships, the company also instructed teams responsible for ranking content in the company’s apps to stop penalizing misinformation, according to sources and an internal document obtained by Platformer. The result is that the sort of viral hoaxes that ran roughshod over the platform during the 2016 US presidential election — ‘Pope Francis endorses Trump,’ Pizzagate, and all the rest — are now just as eligible for free amplification on Facebook, Instagram, and Threads as true stories.”
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.