Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
For the first time, two Pulitzer winners disclosed using AI in their reporting
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
May 8, 2014, 2:33 p.m.
LINK: www.subtraction.com  ➚   |   Posted by: Joshua Benton   |   May 8, 2014

Khoi Vinh, former design director of NYTimes.com, had a blog post up yesterday about the recent trend toward offering a type of insider status as a premium product at news outlets. His old employer has Times Insider, of course — part of the new Times Premier upsell tier, where you get inside dirt on questions like what Gail Collins does when it’s not peak political season. And in the U.K., the hard-paywalled Times of London is going with a lovely print magazine for its members called Byline.

times-of-london-byline

Given the choice between the two options [New York Times vs. Times of London], I’m not sure which I would choose. On the one hand, I would likely get more actual use out of the Times Insider model. On the other hand, I’m skeptical about how often I’d really access that content, and having a real physical object like Byline’s lavishly produced magazine mailed to me four times a year feels like it might be a good reminder of the value of a paid subscription. In either case, the existence of these two experiments will likely tell us how compelling stories about the journalists themselves really are.

Vinh doesn’t mention one other recent entrant, Slate’s Slate Plus, which features items like what Dahlia Lithwick does every day. (Maybe people are really interested in what we do? Maybe?)

Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
For the first time, two Pulitzer winners disclosed using AI in their reporting
Awarded investigative stories are increasingly relying on machine learning, whether covering Chicago police negligence or Israeli weapons in Gaza
“We’re there to cover what’s happening”: How student journalists are covering campus protests
“We don’t come in when there’s something crazy happening and then leave when it’s over. This is just what we do all the time. And I really hope that makes people trust us more as a newspaper.”
Screenshots are one big winner of Meta’s news ban in Canada
“We observe a dramatic increase in posts containing screenshots of Canadian news stories in the post-ban period.”